Introduction
Graduating from a Texas public high school boils down to two things: earning the right number of course credits and meeting a few additional state requirements. The exact credit total depends on the graduation plan you follow, and the choices you make in math, science, and electives.
Texas uses the Foundation High School Program as its baseline. That plan requires a minimum number of credits spread across English, math, science, social studies, languages other than English, fine arts, physical education, and electives. Many students go beyond the minimum by choosing an “endorsement,” a focused sequence of courses.
Why go beyond the minimum? Endorsements open doors to specialized pathways—like STEM, business and industry, public services, arts and humanities, or multidisciplinary studies—and they typically bring the total to 26 credits. Earning the “Distinguished Level of Achievement” also matters if you’re aiming for automatic university admission under Texas’s Top 10% rule.
There’s more to graduation than credits, though. Texas also requires passing end-of-course exams and, for seniors, completing a financial-aid application or an approved opt-out form. Local districts sometimes layer in their own requirements, so families should always confirm campus specifics alongside the state rules.
If you’re mapping out four years of high school, the best move is to lock in the credit basics early, plan for an endorsement that fits your interests, and leave room for electives that build real skills. With a clear plan, the path from your first freshman schedule to a diploma is straightforward—and flexible enough to fit your goals.
1) What is the minimum number of credits to graduate in Texas?
Texas sets the baseline at 22 credits under the Foundation High School Program (FHSP). This is the state-approved minimum needed to earn a diploma without an endorsement.
Those 22 credits include 4 English, 3 math, 3 science, and 3 social studies. Students also complete 2 credits in languages other than English (LOTE), 1 credit in fine arts, 1 credit in physical education, and enough electives to reach 22. The rules spell out options within each subject to give campuses flexibility.
Most students choose to pursue an endorsement, which usually means earning more than 22 credits. But if, after sophomore year, you and your guardian meet with a counselor and formally opt out, you can graduate on the 22-credit FHSP.
2) Do you need 26 credits to graduate high school in Texas?
You don’t have to earn 26 credits to receive a Texas diploma, but you do if you want an endorsement (and nearly all students pursue one). An endorsement typically totals 26 credits—that’s the 22-credit foundation plus additional coursework (notably a fourth math and a fourth science) aligned to a pathway.
Choosing an endorsement helps you specialize—STEM, Business & Industry, Public Services, Arts & Humanities, or Multidisciplinary Studies. It’s also the route to the Distinguished Level of Achievement, which keeps you competitive for selective colleges and is tied to Texas’s Top 10% automatic admission framework.
Bottom line: 22 credits can earn a diploma; 26 credits signals an endorsement and stronger college readiness, and it’s the norm in many Texas high schools.
3) What are the Texas Foundation vs. Distinguished diploma credit requirements?
The Foundation plan is the 22-credit minimum described above. The Distinguished Level of Achievement (DLA) builds on an endorsement and requires four credits in math (including Algebra II) and four credits in science, for a typical 26-credit total.
Why aim for DLA? It’s recognized statewide as the most rigorous high-school credential in Texas and aligns with automatic university admissions policies tied to class rank. If a four-year college is on your radar—especially a Texas public university—DLA is the safest bet.
If you’re unsure which track to choose, start as if you’re going for DLA. You can always adjust later, but beginning with Algebra II in mind keeps your options open for STEM fields, business majors, and competitive scholarships.
4) How many core credits are required in Texas (English, math, science, social studies)?
Under the Foundation plan, students complete 4 English, 3 math, 3 science, and 3 social studies. Within those buckets, Texas lists specific course options. For example, math includes Algebra I and Geometry plus an additional approved course; science includes Biology and a lab-based course like Chemistry, Physics, or Integrated Physics and Chemistry.
Social studies typically covers U.S. History (1.0), U.S. Government (0.5), Economics or Personal Financial Literacy/Economics (0.5), and World History or World Geography (1.0). These combinations satisfy the 3-credit social studies requirement.
Students then add LOTE (2.0), Fine Arts (1.0), PE (1.0), and electives to reach the plan’s total. If you choose an endorsement, you’ll add a fourth math and fourth science plus pathway courses, bringing most students to 26.
5) Can computer science count for language credits in Texas high schools?
Yes. Texas allows computer programming courses to satisfy the two LOTE credits if taken from the approved list (e.g., Computer Science I/II/III, AP Computer Science courses, or IB Computer Science). This is a helpful option for STEM-minded students.
Students who start a traditional world language can also meet LOTE through multiple pathways, including completing two levels of the same language, certain dual-language immersion completions, or approved proficiency demonstrations. Counselors can help you decide which route fits your plan and schedule.
If you’re targeting the STEM endorsement or the Distinguished diploma, you’ll still need the fourth math and fourth science on top of whatever you choose for LOTE—coding or a world language.
6) How many electives do Texas students need to hit graduation credits?
Electives are the “flex” that help you reach 22 (or 26 with an endorsement) while exploring interests. After you satisfy the core areas and LOTE/Fine Arts/PE, you fill remaining credits with electives—career and technical education (CTE), additional sciences or maths, advanced humanities, or pathway-specific sequences.
Endorsements structure many of these electives into a coherent sequence—for example, cybersecurity, health science, business management, or arts pathways. This sequencing not only builds skills but can also lead to industry-based certifications or dual-credit opportunities.
Because electives can vary widely by campus, review your district’s course guide to see which classes count toward your chosen endorsement and how they map to graduation totals.
7) Is Algebra II required to graduate in Texas or only for endorsements?
For the 22-credit Foundation diploma, Algebra II is not required; Algebra I and Geometry are. The third math credit can be chosen from an approved list (for example, Algebraic Reasoning, Statistics, or Precalculus).
However, Algebra II is required if you are pursuing certain goals: an endorsement pathway often includes Algebra II as the fourth math, and the Distinguished Level of Achievement requires completing four maths including Algebra II. If college admissions competitiveness is important to you, plan to take Algebra II.
Pro tip: if you’re aiming at STEM majors, pairing Algebra II with advanced math (like Precalculus) and rigorous science keeps you on track for selective programs.
8) Can you graduate in Texas without an endorsement—how many credits then?
Yes. You may graduate without an endorsement with the 22-credit Foundation plan—but only after your sophomore year and only if you and your parent/guardian receive counseling on the benefits of endorsements and file the formal permission form to opt out.
Even if you opt out, you must still meet all course-by-course requirements (English, math, science, social studies, LOTE, fine arts, PE, electives) and any testing requirements (like end-of-course exams) and the senior financial-aid application requirement or an approved opt-out.
Since endorsements are the default starting point in Texas and align to post-secondary goals, consider maintaining endorsement eligibility through junior year before making a final decision.
9) Do Texas districts add local credits on top of state graduation requirements?
They can. Some districts require additional local credits beyond the state minimums to encourage broader preparation (for example, local professional communication or technology credits). Always check your district’s high-school academic guide for add-ons and how they fit into your four-year plan.
Local requirements do not replace state rules—they sit on top. You still must satisfy the Foundation/endorsement requirements in state law. Your counselor can show you how local options double-count toward endorsements or align with career programs of study.
If you transfer between districts, compare guides early so you can adjust electives or sequences without delaying graduation.
10) How do transfer students meet Texas credit requirements for a diploma?
Out-of-state, out-of-country, and nonpublic-school transfer students are eligible for a Texas diploma, but they must still meet Texas graduation requirements. Missing credits can be earned through approved distance learning, credit-by-exam, or by completing the needed courses after enrolling.
Counselors evaluate transcripts to determine which credits align with Texas standards and which gaps remain. If you’ve completed a college core curriculum at a Texas institution, special provisions can satisfy endorsement and DLA requirements and entitle you to a diploma.
Because rules evolve, use your school’s registrar and counselor as partners to map the fastest route from your prior coursework to a Texas credential—without duplicating what you’ve already mastered.