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How Bail Bond Companies Get Licensed in Hunt County: What Families Should Understand

Wondering if a bail bond company in Hunt County is legit? The county's own application packets give you a practical checklist of what licensed agents and companies have to submit.

5 min read
How Bail Bond Companies Get Licensed in Hunt County: What Families Should Understand

Hunt County's bail bond application forms lay out exactly what an applicant needs to submit for a license. That's helpful for families - it gives you something concrete to ask about when vetting a bondsman. The county has separate packets for individuals and corporations, but both follow the same submission setup: either one original plus 10 copies delivered to the Hunt County Bail Bond Board Secretary, or one original delivered in person plus a PDF emailed to the Secretary.

The corporate packet also shows that "licensed" isn't a one-time stamp. Corporations face ongoing financial reporting deadlines. The application even raises the possibility of deposits or cash-equivalent collateral with the county treasurer if the corporation gets approved. When you're comparing companies, those ongoing obligations separate a properly set up corporate bondsman from someone operating loosely.

Hunt County's submission rule is specific, and it applies to both individuals and corporations: one original and 10 copies go to the Hunt County Bail Bond Board Secretary, or the applicant delivers one original in person and emails a PDF to the Secretary. If a bondsman tells you they're "licensed," they should know this process - it's literally spelled out in the application packet.

Tip: If you’re unsure about someone’s legitimacy, ask what submission method they used (original + 10 copies, or original in office + emailed PDF) and whether they can show proof that the packet was formally submitted.

How Bail Bond Companies Get Licensed in Hunt County: What Families Should Understand

For an individual license in Hunt County, fingerprints are required. The application calls for a fingerprint card taken by the Hunt County Sheriff's Office. The corporate side has a similar requirement tied to the corporation's designated agent. If someone acts surprised by fingerprinting, that's a yellow flag.

Money and accountability are baked into the individual application. Applicants must attest they have the financial resources required by Texas Occupations Code Section 1704.160. The packet backs that up with documentation: a complete sworn financial statement (Exhibit F) and an Authorization of Release. For families, this matters - licensing isn't just a promise, it's paperwork tied to real finances.

  • A Texas Department of Public Safety criminal history report (Exhibit E-1) showing no final convictions since August 27, 1973, as stated in the application
  • Documentary evidence of at least eight hours of approved continuing legal education in criminal law or bail bond law from an accredited Texas institution within the prior two years (Exhibit E)

Cost reminder: The Hunt County individual bail bond license application is accompanied by a nonrefundable $500.00 fee.

Corporate bail bond companies follow the same submission rule as individuals: one original and 10 copies to the Bail Bond Board Secretary, or one original delivered in person plus a PDF emailed to the Secretary. The corporate packet also ties background screening to a real person - the designated agent must include a fingerprint card taken by the Hunt County Sheriff's Office.

  1. Plan for the annual filing - corporations must file annual financial statements by March 1 each year.
  2. Track the quarterly deadlines - quarterly statements are due on the stated schedule, with examples listed as May 15, August 15, and November 15.

Corporate licensing also involves potential collateral with the county. If approved, a corporation may need to deposit cash - or the cash value of certificates of deposit or a cashier's check - with the Hunt County treasurer, in an amount stated on the application. That's one reason some companies are more paperwork-heavy than others: they may be operating under ongoing financial conditions.

On the corporate application, the deposit language is explicit: once approved, a corporation may be required to deposit cash or the cash value of certificates of deposit or a cashier's check with the Hunt County treasurer, in an amount stated on the application. The packet also references executing an Assignment of Security for Bail Bond Collateral and a Financial Institution Acknowledgement. If you're checking out a corporate bondsman, these are the kinds of formal back-end items you can ask about - they show whether the business is actually set up to meet Hunt County's conditions.

Note: The deposit amount is stated on the corporation’s application. If you’re working with a corporate bondsman, ask whether any required deposit with the county treasurer is current.

How Bail Bond Companies Get Licensed in Hunt County: What Families Should Understand

How Families Should Use

  • Ask whether the bondsman is licensed locally in Hunt County (individual license vs. corporate license)
  • Ask which submission method they used: one original + 10 copies to the Bail Bond Board Secretary, or one original delivered in office plus a PDF emailed to the Secretary
  • If you’re dealing with a company (corporation), ask how they handle ongoing financial statement filings (annual by March 1, plus quarterly statements by the stated due dates)
  • For corporate bonds, ask whether the corporation was required to post any cash or cash-equivalent deposit with the Hunt County treasurer, and whether that requirement is current

Caution: The county’s application packets tell you what a bondsman must submit, but the forms themselves aren’t a directory of currently active, licensed bondsmen. Use the requirements as a vetting tool, and verify current licensing separately.

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