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Name: Texas Senate Bill 2610 (SB 2610)
Type: Statutory (Law)
Authoritative Source: Texas Legislature SB 2610
Certification Available: No. There is no official certification for Texas SB 2610. However, the Secure Controls Framework Conformity Assessment Program (SCF CAP) has the ability to provide a third-party conformity assessment against Texas SB 2610 requirements that can lead the following SCF-based certification: SCF Certified – SCF CORE Fundamentals.
Note: Texas SB 2610 listed the SCF as one of a select few cybersecurity frameworks with adequacy to provide necessary security coverage.
Too Long / Didn’t Read (TL/DR): Texas Senate Bill 2610 establishes a novel and pragmatic approach to bolstering cybersecurity among small businesses that otherwise could not afford extensive defenses or litigation costs. By offering legal protection from punitive damages, Texas created a clear incentive structure that aligns legal risk reduction with best-practice security governance. The caveat is that Texas businesses can prove it has an appropriate, maintained cybersecurity program is in place.
Texas SB 2610 encourages businesses to take concrete steps: evaluate risk, adopt a recognized framework scaled to their size, implement layered safeguards and document every facet of their program. Those that do so not only stand to gain legal protection in the event of a breach but also enhance operational resilience, customer trust and compliance posture. This “carrot, not stick” approach is designed to empower Texas’s SMBs to invest in meaningful cybersecurity without fear of crippling litigation, even in the face of unfortunate breaches.
In a landscape where cyber threats increasingly target small and medium businesses, Texas has taken a landmark step with Senate Bill 2610, enacted in June 2025 (effective September 1, 2025). Rather than imposing new burdens, the law offers a strong incentive with limited liability protection to small businesses that proactively adopt and maintain reasonable cybersecurity practices. Specifically, it shields qualifying businesses from exemplary (punitive) damages in data breach lawsuits, provided they can demonstrate an active cybersecurity program aligned with recognized standards at the time of the breach.
This page provides a cybersecurity-focused summary of Texas SB 2610 from a GRC practitioner's perspective, including:
The legislative analysis notes that penalties for data breaches, particularly for small businesses with limited legal and compliance resources, can threaten long-term survival. Texas SB 2610 addresses this by offering a legal safe harbor: small businesses that adopt sufficient cybersecurity measures are protected from punitive damages, even if a breach occurs.
Supporters including the National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) framed the bill as a crucial support for economic resilience, calling it a "carrot not a stick" that encourages investment in cybersecurity without imposing regulatory mandates.
Additionally, Texas SB 2610 aligns Texas with earlier state efforts in Ohio (2018) and Utah (2021), which demonstrated increased cybersecurity investment following similar safe harbor legislation.
Texas SB 2610 applies to Texas-based business entities that:
The safe harbor applies only in actions arising from a “breach of system security” under Texas law (e.g., when sensitive data is unlawfully acquired) and only for causes accruing on or after September 1, 2025.
To qualify for safe harbor, a business must demonstrate maintenance of a cybersecurity program satisfying criteria outlined in Section 542.004, including:
The program must include these three essential categories of safeguards (e.g., administrative, technical and physical), focused specifically on protecting "personal identifying information" and "sensitive personal information."
The program must conform to at least one recognized cybersecurity standard from lists that include:
Section 542.004(3) identifies that a business entity’s cybersecurity program must be designed to:
Texas SB 2610 adopts a tiered approach, requiring different levels of compliance depending on employee size:
While targeted at small- and mid-sized enterprises (SMEs) across the board, Texas SB 2610 is particularly relevant to businesses that:
The law empowers entities often overlooked by large-scale legislative or regulatory cybersecurity requirements.
To take full advantage of Texas SB 2610’s safe harbor, organizations should develop and document a cybersecurity program with the following components:
Texas SB 2610’s liability protection is conditional on demonstrable compliance. If a breach occurs, a company must show that:
Consequently, quality documentation is essential:
Without comprehensive records, an organization cannot credibly assert its eligibility for safe harbor and that puts it at full exposure to punitive damages. Documentation must be maintained continuously, version-controlled and readily available for legal defense or compliance reviews.
This legislation signals that cybersecurity is now a strategic business imperative, not just an IT task. Companies that embrace Texas SB 2610’s spirit position themselves for:
Eliminating exposure to punitive damages can be transformational for small businesses, where such awards (even if rare) can be financially devastating. Texas SB 2610 helps limit worst-case litigation costs, allowing firms to invest more confidently in cybersecurity.
By imposing no penalties and offering measurable benefits, Texas SB 2610 encourages proactive upgrades. As newer frameworks are published, businesses are required to update within 180 days, fostering ongoing improvement and adaptability. That helps ensure that cybersecurity practices remain in step with evolving threats and industry expectations.
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