TLFFRA
Texas Local Fire Fighters Retirement Act (TLFFRA)

TLFFRA Field Guide

Profiles of all 42 paid and part-paid firefighter pension plans organized under TLFFRA. FY2024 financial and actuarial data sourced from the Texas Pension Review Board (PRB). Companion guide for the Texas Association of Public Employee Retirement Systems (TEXPERS) 2026 Annual Conference.

Systems42 TLFFRA Plans
Total Assets$2.96 Billion
Reporting YearFY2024 (PRB)

Statewide Snapshot

FY2024 PRB Data

Texas Local Fire Fighters Retirement Act (TLFFRA) plans are locally funded, locally governed defined benefit pensions covering paid and part-paid firefighters. Each system has its own seven-member board of trustees and contracts independently for actuarial, custodial, investment, and administrative services. The state's role runs through the Texas Pension Review Board (PRB), which collects reports and publishes comparative data, but does not direct investment policy or benefit design.

A note on terminology: this guide uses AUM for assets under management, FR for funded ratio, AAL for actuarial accrued liability, AVA for actuarial value of assets, FSRP for Funding Soundness Restoration Plan (a statutory remedy under Texas Government Code §802.2015 / 802.2016), and MET for the PRB's Minimum Educational Training program for trustees.

How to read this guide

Every number on this page is sourced from the Texas Pension Review Board's published FY2024 dataset and verified against the underlying CSV files. Funded ratios use the actuarial value of assets divided by the actuarial accrued liability. Amortization periods are the PRB's effective amortization, which factors in each plan's amortization policy and contribution history.

Click any fund name in the directory or leaderboards to open that plan's full profile. Each profile carries the FY2024 numbers, the cost-method and contribution-policy detail, the service-provider information that fund publishes, and a contextual narrative against its size cohort.

Combined AUM
$2.96B
FY2024 market value
Average Funded Ratio
65.6%
Simple mean across plans
Asset-Weighted FR
72.1%
Weighted by plan size
Median Fund Size
$53.2M
21st–22nd of 42 by AUM
Largest Fund
Irving
$279.1M
Best Funded
Paris
105.07% (overfunded)
Median Discount Rate
7.25%
Range 6.50% to 7.80%

The asset-weighted funded ratio runs about 6.5 percentage points above the simple mean, which reflects that several of the better-funded plans also sit near the top of the asset-size distribution. The directory above shows the distribution.

Leaderboards

Top 10 by Metric

Funded Ratio (Highest)Actuarial value as % of AAL

1Paris FF105.1%
4Denton FF91.1%
6Irving FF87.8%
10Denison FF76.7%

Assets Under ManagementMarket value of net assets

1Irving FF$279.1M
2Lubbock FF$277.8M
3Amarillo FF$254.3M
4Laredo FF$247.9M
6Denton FF$167.9M
7Beaumont FF$119.2M
9Tyler FF$91.1M
10Midland FF$91.1M

Shortest AmortizationYears to fully fund the unfunded liability

1Paris FF0.0 yr
4Weslaco FF6.4 yr
5Denton FF6.5 yr
8Denison FF15.3 yr
9Cleburne FF17.2 yr
10Texas City FF17.6 yr

Most Conservative Discount RateLower assumption is more conservative

3Denton FF6.75%
7Irving FF7.00%
9Odessa FF7.00%

The Directory

All 42 Funds

Click any column header to sort. Use the search box to filter by fund name. The filter chips narrow the list to a single PRB asset-size class. Click any fund name to open its full profile.

42 of 42 funds
Fund AUM Funded Exp (bps) Amort (yrs) Discount Infl. Payroll Method Cont. Type
Irving FF$279.1M87.8%28.020.9 yrs7.00%2.75%2.75%EANActuarial
Lubbock FF$277.8M74.3%14.018.2 yrs7.50%2.50%3.25%EANFixed
Amarillo FF$254.3M95.2%37.05.9 yrs7.35%2.50%2.75%EANFixed
Laredo FF$247.9M59.3%25.637.1 yrs7.10%2.75%3.00%EANFixed
Corpus Christi FF$194.7M62.5%46.714.7 yrs7.00%2.50%2.50%EANFixed
Denton FF$167.9M91.1%36.66.5 yrs6.75%2.50%3.00%EANActuarial
Beaumont FF$119.2M54.1%78.335.0 yrs7.25%3.00%3.25%EANFixed
Longview FF$99.8M68.8%87.829.6 yrs7.50%2.50%3.00%EANFixed
Tyler FF$91.1M72.3%90.824.5 yrs7.00%2.75%2.75%EANFixed
Midland FF$91.1M69.6%130.928.8 yrs7.00%2.75%3.00%EANActuarial
The Woodlands FF$80.2M103.8%42.50.0 yrs7.00%2.50%3.00%EANActuarial
San Angelo FF$79.8M60.7%28.034.0 yrs7.80%2.50%3.50%EANFixed
Killeen FF$74.7M66.3%38.228.8 yrs7.25%2.75%2.75%EANFixed
McAllen FF$66.0M65.4%67.524.6 yrs7.25%2.85%2.85%EANFixed
Abilene FF$63.8M45.5%57.022.1 yrs7.50%2.50%3.00%EANFixed
Temple FF$63.2M69.4%27.130.5 yrs7.30%2.50%4.25%EANFixed
Wichita Falls FF$59.7M52.5%91.956.7 yrs7.50%2.50%3.00%EANFixed
Port Arthur FF$59.6M77.5%89.519.4 yrs7.25%2.75%2.75%EANOther
Galveston FF$59.3M65.9%70.423.9 yrs7.50%2.75%2.75%EANFixed
Travis ESD #6 FF$57.2M86.9%43.326.6 yrs6.50%2.50%2.75%EANFixed
Conroe FF$53.8M63.4%83.729.0 yrs7.25%2.50%4.00%EANFixed
Odessa FF$52.7M36.4%121.222.7 yrs7.00%3.00%3.00%EANFixed
Harlingen FF$44.5M62.3%51.245.0 yrs7.75%2.50%3.50%EANFixed
Texarkana FF$42.3M81.3%99.4Infinite7.25%2.75%2.75%EANFixed
Cleburne FF$29.7M64.0%72.217.2 yrs7.35%2.50%3.00%EANOther
Waxahachie FF$27.9M75.2%31.810.9 yrs7.00%2.50%4.00%EANOther
Lufkin FF$24.6M50.0%41.229.9 yrs7.25%2.75%2.75%EANFixed
Denison FF$24.1M76.7%65.115.3 yrs7.25%2.50%2.50%EANFixed
Weslaco FF$22.2M89.5%65.16.4 yrs7.25%2.50%3.25%EANFixed
Greenville FF$18.1M44.2%48.127.9 yrs7.25%2.75%4.00%EANFixed
Texas City FF$17.5M43.9%62.217.6 yrs7.25%2.75%3.00%EANFixed
Big Spring FF$17.0M62.8%45.919.1 yrs7.75%3.00%4.50%EANFixed
Paris FF$16.8M105.1%90.10.0 yrs7.25%2.75%UCOther
Univ Park FF$14.3M48.7%107.722.8 yrs7.00%2.75%EANActuarial
Corsicana FF$13.5M59.5%69.823.0 yrs7.00%2.75%2.50%EANFixed
Orange FF$10.2M47.8%55.834.5 yrs7.75%2.00%2.50%EANFixed
Marshall FF$9.2M35.7%136.265.0 yrs7.25%3.25%EANFixed
Sweetwater FF$9.1M51.3%106.539.0 yrs7.50%3.00%3.00%EANFixed
Plainview FF$7.5M42.9%113.233.1 yrs7.50%2.50%3.25%EANFixed
Brownwood FF$5.9M47.2%154.124.4 yrs7.00%2.75%2.75%EANFixed
San Benito FF$5.8M62.2%99.132.0 yrs7.50%2.50%3.00%EANFixed
Atlanta FF$4.7M75.7%121.820.7 yrs6.75%2.75%2.75%EANActuarial

AAL = Actuarial Accrued Liability. EAN = Entry Age Normal. UC = Unit Credit. PUC = Projected Unit Credit. "Inf" in the amortization column flags an effectively infinite amortization period under current contributions.

Distribution of Key Assumptions

Across All 42 Plans

Most TLFFRA plans use the Entry Age Normal cost method with a fixed contribution rate. Discount rates have compressed downward over the last decade, but most plans still assume returns above 7%, which contrasts with the more conservative posture of larger statewide systems.

Funding Soundness Context

PRB Statutory Framework

The PRB's Pension Funding Guidelines establish a maximum amortization period of 30 years, with a preferred range of 10 to 25 years. Plans with funded ratios below 65% combined with amortization periods exceeding 30 years generally trigger a Funding Soundness Restoration Plan (FSRP) requirement under Texas Government Code Section 802.2015 or 802.2016, which obligates the sponsoring city and the board to jointly adopt a plan to bring the system back into compliance within 30 years. Each TLFFRA plan operates locally, and funded-ratio movement reflects decades of contribution policy, benefit design, market returns, and demographic experience, not management quality in any single year.

Above 30-Year Statutory Max
12
1 effectively infinite, 11 finite
Funded Ratio Under 50%
10
Actuarial value of assets < 50% of liability
Funded Ratio 50–60%
5
Plans below the 65% FSRP combined-trigger

How to read these counts

Aggregate counts are presented above in place of plan-by-plan callouts. Plan-level funding metrics for every TLFFRA system are visible in the directory above (sortable by funded ratio or amortization), and the distribution charts in the previous section let you hover to see which plans fall in any specific bucket. The PRB publishes the official, current FSRP status of each system at prb.texas.gov/funding-soundness-restoration-plan-fsrp, which is the canonical source.

Funding posture reflects long-horizon factors. A plan with a funded ratio below the average today may be paying down accelerated under a recently-adopted FSRP and on track to clear within the statutory window. And a plan currently above average may be on a slower long-term trajectory. The PRB's plan-detail pages (linked from each fund profile) show ten-plus years of trend data per system.