Texas assault charges: simple assault is typically Class A or C misdemeanor (assault); aggravated forms can reach up to 99 yrs (with serious bodily injury / weapon).
Published May 6, 2026
## Assault charges in Texas
Assault is a graduated offense in every state — same conduct can range from a few days in jail to decades in prison depending on:
- The seriousness of the injury or threat
- Whether a weapon was involved
- Whether the victim is in a protected class (police officer, child, elderly)
- The defendant's intent
- Prior record
### Texas assault classification
- **Simple assault:** Class A or C misdemeanor (assault); battery is Class A
- **Aggravated assault:** 1st or 2nd-degree felony; up to 99 yrs (with serious bodily injury / weapon)
## Assault vs battery — different in some states
Many states (CA, FL, IL, IN, others) distinguish:
- **Assault** — placing someone in fear of imminent harmful contact (no actual touching required)
- **Battery** — actual harmful or offensive physical contact
Other states (TX, MA, KY) merge them under "assault" or use different terminology entirely.
## Common aggravators that elevate the charge
- **Use of a deadly weapon** — gun, knife, even fists in some cases
- **Serious bodily injury** — broken bones, disfigurement, organ damage, hospitalization
- **Victim's status** — police officer, EMT, healthcare worker, teacher, child, elderly, pregnant
- **Strangulation / impeding breath** — many states have separate higher-degree charges
- **Assault during a felony** — robbery, burglary, sexual assault
- **Hate-crime motivation**
- **Domestic violence** — overlay that adds federal firearm prohibition
- **Repeat offenses**
## Common defenses
- **Self-defense** — most common; requires reasonable belief of imminent harm and proportional force
- **Defense of others / property** — similar standards
- **Mutual combat / consent** — limited; many states refuse consent as defense to serious bodily injury
- **Lack of intent** — accidental contact
- **Misidentification** — wrong person
- **Fabrication** — particularly in custody disputes, neighbor feuds, mental-health crises
- **Constitutional challenges** — illegal stop, search, or interrogation
## Misdemeanor vs felony assault
The line between misdemeanor assault and felony assault usually depends on:
- **Injury severity** — slight pain vs serious bodily injury
- **Weapon use** — even brandishing without contact can elevate
- **Victim category** — protected class triggers higher charge
- **Aggravating circumstances**
Felony assault carries lifelong consequences — voting rights, firearm rights (federal Lautenberg + 922(g)), professional licensing, employment, housing.
## What you should do
Don't talk to police about an assault charge without a lawyer. The first 24 hours after arrest set the tone for the entire case. Texas criminal-defense attorneys typically offer free initial consultations and can assess whether self-defense, mutual combat, or other defenses apply. Many cases that look bad initially resolve favorably with skilled representation.
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*This guide is general information about Texas law as of early 2026 and is not legal advice. Assault sentencing depends on factors specific to each case. Talk to a licensed Texas criminal-defense attorney about your specific case.*
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change and outcomes depend on your specific situation — talk to a licensed attorney before acting on anything you read here.