Texas Launch — Spring 2026

Know what changed
before they knock.

Regulatory agencies change rules constantly — and none of them send useful alerts when they do. RegulatorPulse monitors every agency relevant to your business and delivers a plain-English briefing every Tuesday morning — so you're not learning about it for the first time during an inspection.

Launching Spring 2026 · Free 30-day trial

RegulatorPulse is an information service, not a substitute for legal or compliance counsel.

Launching with: Medical Spas · Salons & Barbershops · Gyms & Studios · Coming next: Bars & Restaurants · Childcare Centers · Home Health Agencies · Dry Cleaners · Food Trucks · Churches & Nonprofits · Event Venues · Physical Therapy Clinics · Veterinary Clinics

Most small businesses find out about rule changes
the hard way.

Agencies don't send alerts when rules change.
The inspector cites what the rule says today — not what it said at your last inspection.

Multiple agencies. Zero alerts.

A small business can face active compliance obligations from 4–8 agencies simultaneously — state licensing boards, environmental regulators, federal safety agencies, and more. Most of them don't send useful plain-English notifications when rules change.

Regulators don't warn you.

Agencies publish rule changes in state registers and on agency websites — in legal language, without notification. You are presumed to know. The inspector cites what the rule says today, not what it said at your last inspection.

The cost of missing one change.

State licensing citationup to $5,000
Liquor license violationsuspension or cancellation
Environmental enforcementup to $25,000/day
OSHA serious violationup to $16,550/violation

The cost of one missed rule change can far exceed the cost of staying informed.

Bad reviews can attract regulatory attention.

RegulatorPulse monitors review patterns across your industry — flagging language that correlates with regulatory complaints before inspectors arrive. When your own profiles contain flagged language, we alert you and deliver a suggested response ready to approve and post. Research confirms the link.

Your current options leave gaps.

Word of mouth. Trade newsletters. Occasionally reading raw regulatory text. Compliance attorneys are essential when you need legal guidance — but most small businesses can't afford $300–$500/hour for ongoing monitoring. RegulatorPulse fills the awareness gap between your attorney visits.

Continuous monitoring. Weekly delivery.
Plain English. Every time.

RegulatorPulse watches every relevant regulatory source — so you don't have to. Here's how it works in Texas, our first launch state.

1

Tell us about your business

Tell us your industry, your state, and the services you offer. Your briefings are filtered to what's actually relevant — so you spend less time sorting through noise.

2

We monitor everything

RegulatorPulse scans key state and federal agencies daily and flags notable changes. In Texas: TMB, TDLR, TABC, TCEQ, HHSC, OSHA, FDA, and more. Primary source links included in every item.

3

Tuesday briefing arrives

Every Tuesday morning, your briefing arrives. Action Required items at the top. Watch items next. Informational context last. Each item links directly to the original regulatory document.

4

Review intelligence included

Every week we scan thousands of Google, Yelp, and Facebook reviews across your industry — flagging patterns that correlate with regulatory complaints, and alerting you when your own profiles contain language associated with regulatory issues.

5

Reply with questions

Have a question about a briefing item? Reply to the email. Our team typically responds within one to two business days with additional context and source references. Not legal advice — clear regulatory intelligence.

This is what lands in your inbox.

ILLUSTRATIVE SAMPLE — This example demonstrates the format and type of content included in a RegulatorPulse briefing. Names, statistics, citations, and enforcement details are for demonstration purposes only and may not reflect actual regulatory actions. Actual briefings vary by industry, regulatory activity, and timing. Sample shown for Medical Spas — your industry follows the same format with its specific agencies.

Sorted by urgency. Linked to primary sources. Specific to your business type.

RegulatorPulse — MedSpa Edition Week of March 4, 2026 · Austin, TX
Action Required

TMB: Medical Director Agreement Must Be On-Site During All Operating Hours

The Texas Medical Board clarified on February 28 that medical director agreements must be physically present at the facility during all operating hours — not merely held off-site or in a management office. Two Austin practices received deficiency letters last month over this issue.

Action: Print and place your medical director agreement in your on-site compliance binder. Confirm your medical director has signed the current version. Deadline: before your next operating day.

Source: Texas Medical Board Guidance Bulletin, Feb 28, 2026


Watch

BON Proposed Rule: NP Supervision Ratio in Aesthetic Settings Under Review

The Texas Board of Nursing has opened a comment period on proposed amendments to NP supervision ratios in aesthetic practice settings. If adopted, the change would affect NP-led practices statewide. Comment period closes April 15, 2026.

Source: Texas Register, Vol. 51, No. 9


Informational

FDA: Dermal Filler Adverse Event Reports Up 18% in Q4 2025

FDA's MedWatch database shows an 18% increase in adverse events related to hyaluronic acid fillers. No rule change — informational only. Full report linked.

Source: FDA MedWatch Quarterly Summary


Rule of the Week

Medical Director Oversight Requirements — 22 TAC §193.17

Texas law requires a physician medical director to provide active, ongoing supervision of all delegated medical procedures at a MedSpa — not merely sign a contract. "Active supervision" means the physician must be available for consultation, review adverse events, and maintain documented oversight protocols.

What to check: Does your medical director have a written protocol for each delegated procedure? Has it been reviewed in the past 12 months? Is your adverse event log current? These are the three items inspectors look for when evaluating delegation compliance.

Source: 22 TAC §193.17 — Delegation of Medical Acts


Enforcement Spotlight

Austin MedSpa — $4,500 Fine for Unsupervised Injectable Administration

A Travis County medical spa was fined $4,500 and placed on probation after a TMB investigation found that a licensed esthetician had administered neurotoxin injections without physician supervision present or immediately available. The medical director had signed delegation documents but had no documented supervision protocol and had not visited the facility in over 90 days.

Takeaway: Delegation paperwork alone is not sufficient. TMB requires evidence of active, ongoing supervision — documented site visits, consultation logs, and signed protocol reviews.

Source: TMB Enforcement Action Database (identifying details modified)


Regulatory Calendar

Next 30 Days — MedSpa

March 19: TMB March 26–27 board meeting agenda posts — watch for supervision and delegation rule items.

March 26–27: Texas Medical Board quarterly meeting, Austin.

April 10: Texas Physician Assistant Board meeting — scope of practice items may affect PA-supervised practices.

April 15: BON comment period closes on proposed NP supervision ratio amendments (see Watch item above).


Review Intelligence

Part 1: Industry Pattern — statewide spike in TMB supervision language  |  Part 2: Your Profile — 3 reviews flagged

Industry Pattern (Illustrative Example): This week's industry scan flagged an increase in reviews mentioning "no doctor present" and "no consultation" — language that research suggests correlates with regulatory complaint filings. This type of trend is the early warning signal RegulatorPulse is designed to surface.

Your Profile: Three of your recent reviews contain matching language. Here's what your customers said — and a ready-to-post response for each:

  • "I never saw a doctor the whole time I was there." — posted Feb 24
  • "The person doing my injections seemed unsure of what she was doing." — posted Feb 22
  • "No one checked my medical history before starting." — posted Feb 19

This language maps to TMB Rule 22 TAC §193.17 — physician supervision and pre-procedure patient evaluation requirements. Research suggests a correlation between review language patterns and subsequent regulatory complaints. Customers who write reviews like these file TMB complaints at elevated rates.

Self-audit checklist before your next patient:
Is your medical director on-site or immediately reachable during all procedures?
Is a physician, PA, or NP conducting pre-procedure evaluations for every injectable patient?
Is your medical history intake form current and signed before treatment begins?
Are delegation protocols documented and signed within the last 12 months?

AI-DRAFTED RESPONSE — Review posted Feb 24 · 1 star

"Thank you for sharing your experience. We take every concern seriously. At [Practice Name], every patient receives a consultation with our licensed medical provider before any treatment begins — this is both our standard and a requirement we hold ourselves to without exception. We'd welcome the opportunity to speak with you directly to understand what fell short of that standard. Please contact us at [phone/email]."

Approve & Copy Response →

Industry pattern data is drawn from all businesses in your industry — thousands of reviews per week, not just yours. The more subscribers in an industry, the sharper the signal.


Industry News

AmSpa 2026 State of the Industry Report Expected This Quarter

The American Med Spa Association's annual benchmark report — the most comprehensive data on MedSpa revenue, staffing, services, and compliance trends — is expected to publish in Q1 2026. We'll summarize the compliance-relevant findings when it releases.

Texas legislature in session through June 2026. No active bills targeting MedSpa supervision have advanced out of committee this week. Monitoring continues.

Source: AmSpa Industry Resources · Texas Legislature Online

Ready to stop finding out from inspectors?

30-day free trial. Cancel anytime.

Get Early Access →

Built for your industry.
Not a generic newsletter.

Every briefing is filtered to your specific vertical, state, and services. Launching Spring 2026 with Medical Spas, Salons & Barbershops, and Gyms & Studios — more industries to follow.

Now Launching

Medical Spas

One of the most complex small-business regulatory environments in Texas. Six agencies. Constantly evolving rules. A single TMB disciplinary action creates a permanent public record that follows your practice — and your medical director — forever.

  • Texas Medical Board (TMB)
  • Texas Board of Nursing (BON)
  • TDLR — esthetics, laser, electrology
  • OSHA — bloodborne pathogens, sharps
  • FDA — Botox, fillers, energy devices
  • DEA — if handling controlled substances
Get Started →
Now Launching

Salons & Barbershops

State cosmetology boards inspect aggressively and cite frequently — and most owners don't know the rules changed until they fail an inspection. Sanitation standards, chemical use rules, and licensing requirements are updated regularly.

  • State cosmetology / barbering licensing board
  • OSHA — HazCom, formaldehyde (keratin treatments)
  • FDA — cosmetic ingredient alerts
  • State environmental agency — chemical disposal (nail salons)
Get Started →
Now Launching

Gyms & Fitness Studios

Texas gyms, yoga studios, CrossFit boxes, and Pilates studios face TDLR licensing for certain services, AED requirements, fire marshal occupancy rules, OSHA chemical safety standards, and Health Spa Act membership disclosures.

  • TDLR — Health Spa Act, tanning, esthetics licensing
  • Local fire marshal — occupancy, egress, suppression
  • OSHA — chemical safety, slip/fall prevention
  • Local building & zoning — ADA, use permits
Get Started →
Coming Next

Bars & Restaurants

The highest-stakes vertical in Texas. Food service operators face overlapping jurisdiction from TABC, DSHS, and local health departments — with rules changing at city, county, and state level simultaneously. A TABC violation can suspend your license overnight. Most operators find out about rule changes at their next inspection.

  • Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission (TABC)
  • DSHS — food safety, handler certifications
  • Local health departments — city/county standards
  • OSHA — kitchen safety, chemical handling
Join Waitlist — Get notified first

Childcare Centers

Childcare operators face some of the most consequential compliance stakes of any small business category. A single high-weight deficiency can trigger an emergency license suspension that closes the facility overnight.

  • State child care licensing / health & human services
  • State child protective services — abuse/neglect investigations
  • Local fire marshal — facility safety standards
  • OSHA — employee health & safety
⏳ Coming Soon — Join Waitlist

Home Health Agencies

Home health operators face continuous state oversight plus federal CMS Conditions of Participation that are actively updated — where a single compliance failure can trigger a deficiency citation or loss of Medicare certification.

  • State health & human services commission
  • CMS — Medicare/Medicaid Conditions of Participation
  • OIG — fraud and abuse compliance updates
  • OSHA — home health worker safety
⏳ Coming Soon — Join Waitlist

Dry Cleaners

Dry cleaners using PERC face some of the most stringent environmental compliance requirements of any small business — with state air permits, EPA MACT standards, and hazardous waste rules that are actively enforced with significant daily fines.

  • State environmental agency — PERC air permits, remediation
  • EPA — 40 CFR Part 63 MACT standards
  • OSHA — chemical exposure, ventilation
  • Local fire marshal — chemical storage
⏳ Coming Soon — Join Waitlist

Food Trucks & Catering

Mobile food operators navigate overlapping jurisdiction from state health departments, local agencies, and alcohol regulators — with requirements that vary by county and change without notice. Most operators learn about new rules at permit renewal, not before.

  • State dept. of health services / food safety
  • Local health departments — city/county permits
  • State alcoholic beverage commission
  • Local fire marshal — propane, hood suppression
⏳ Coming Soon — Join Waitlist

Churches & Nonprofits

Churches and nonprofits face a distinct and often overlooked set of regulatory obligations — from building and fire code compliance to food service permits, childcare licensing, and employment law requirements that apply even to religious organizations.

  • State fire marshal — building and fire code compliance
  • State health dept. — food service (kitchens, fundraiser meals)
  • State child care licensing — if operating childcare programs
  • State workforce commission — employment law updates
  • IRS — nonprofit compliance, UBIT updates
⏳ Coming Soon — Join Waitlist

Event Venues

Event venues juggle permits and inspections from multiple agencies simultaneously — fire marshal occupancy limits, alcohol service rules, food handler requirements, and ADA compliance standards that can change at the city, county, and state level independently.

  • State & local fire marshal — occupancy, egress, suppression
  • State alcoholic beverage commission
  • State health dept. — food service, temporary event permits
  • Local building & zoning — use permits, ADA compliance
⏳ Coming Soon — Join Waitlist

Physical Therapy Clinics

PT clinics face overlapping oversight from state licensing boards, CMS, and OSHA — with Medicare billing rules, direct access documentation requirements, and aide supervision standards that update regularly and carry serious enforcement consequences.

  • State physical & occupational therapy board
  • CMS / Medicare — billing, CoP compliance
  • State health & human services — if licensed as rehab facility
  • OSHA — bloodborne pathogens, workplace safety
⏳ Coming Soon — Join Waitlist

Veterinary Clinics

Vet practices navigate state veterinary licensing boards, DEA controlled substance registration, OSHA hazard communication standards, and radiation machine inspections — often without a dedicated compliance function tracking what's changed.

  • State board of veterinary medical examiners
  • DEA — controlled substance registration & logs
  • OSHA — bloodborne pathogens, hazard communication
  • State health dept. — radiation machine registration
⏳ Coming Soon — Join Waitlist

"Can't I just ask ChatGPT?"

Fair question. Here's the honest answer.

Asking an AI chatbot

ChatGPT and similar tools have a training cutoff — they don't know what your state licensing board issued last Tuesday. They can't monitor agency rulemaking feeds. They don't know your specific license structure, services, or location. You'd need to re-explain your situation every session — and you'd have to remember to ask in the first place. Compliance doesn't work on demand. It works on schedule.

RegulatorPulse

RegulatorPulse scans key agencies daily — automatically. Your profile is on file. We flag items commonly relevant to your industry, state, and services. You don't have to remember to check anything. Every Tuesday, a briefing arrives whether you thought to ask or not. That's the difference between a chatbot and a dedicated monitoring service.

What you're probably wondering.

Is this legal advice?

No — and we're clear about that in every communication. RegulatorPulse provides informational summaries of publicly available regulatory developments. We describe what rules say and when they changed. We do not assess whether your specific establishment is in compliance, and we do not advise you on your specific situation. That's the job of your compliance attorney. We make sure you know what the rule says — you and your counsel decide what to do about it.

How is this different from my trade association membership?

Association newsletters cover regulatory topics occasionally, in general terms, filtered through the association's priorities. RegulatorPulse monitors regulatory sources directly and continuously — delivering briefings based on your industry, license type, and city. It's the difference between a monthly newsletter and a dedicated monitoring service.

What if nothing changes in a given week?

You still receive a briefing. It will note there were no new regulatory developments to report — and include a rules refresh item and compliance tip relevant to your industry. Knowing nothing changed is itself valuable confirmation. And the standing sections ensure every briefing is substantive regardless of regulatory activity that week.

Do you cover my city's local rules?

Yes. For state agencies we cover every business in your state. For local health department inspections (food trucks, restaurants, food service at venues and churches), we monitor the local health department for your city as specified in your intake form. Major metro areas are fully covered.

Do churches and nonprofits really have compliance obligations?

Yes — and many are unaware of the full scope. Religious organizations are not exempt from fire code, food safety, building code, or employment law requirements. Churches operating childcare programs face full state licensing obligations. Those serving food at fundraisers or events need state or local health department permits. Changes to IRS nonprofit compliance rules can also affect tax-exempt status. RegulatorPulse tracks all of it.

Can I have multiple locations covered?

Yes. Multi-location plans are available for every industry. Contact us for quotes on larger groups (5+ locations).

How do I cancel?

Any time, from your customer portal with one click. Cancellation takes effect at the end of your current billing period. No fees, no questions required — though we appreciate feedback if you have it.

Texas MedSpas: Get early access.

Free 30-day trial. We'll reach out when we launch — before the public announcement.

Free 30-day trial. No long-term commitment.