Texas has some of the harshest drug laws in the United States. The difference between a misdemeanor drug charge and a felony — between probation and a decade in prison — often comes down to a few grams of material or which penalty group a substance falls into. Understanding how Texas classifies drug offenses is essential to understanding your exposure and your defense options.
Texas Health and Safety Code Chapter 481 divides controlled substances into Penalty Groups (PG) 1, 1-A, 1-B, 2, 2-A, 3, and 4, plus a separate category for marijuana. The penalty group a substance belongs to — not just the quantity — determines the baseline severity of the charge.
PG-1 includes cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine, ketamine, oxycodone, hydrocodone (above certain thresholds), and other high-risk substances. Penalties range from state jail felony (under 1 gram: 180 days to 2 years) up to enhanced first-degree felony (400+ grams: 10 to 99 years or life, $100,000 fine).
PG-2 includes MDMA (ecstasy/molly), PCP, mescaline, and most synthetic cannabinoids. Penalties mirror PG-1 at higher quantities but start slightly less severe for small amounts.
PG-3 covers Xanax (alprazolam), Valium (diazepam), Ritalin, anabolic steroids, and other prescription medications when possessed without a valid prescription. Smaller quantities are misdemeanors; larger amounts move into felony territory.
Marijuana is classified under its own section. In Texas, which has not legalized recreational marijuana, possession of 2 oz or less is a Class B misdemeanor (up to 180 days). Larger amounts escalate: 4 oz to 5 lbs is a state jail felony; 5 to 50 lbs is a third-degree felony; 2,000+ lbs is a first-degree felony.
The line between simple possession and delivery or trafficking is not always about quantity. Prosecutors look at the totality of circumstances including:
A delivery or manufacture charge carries significantly higher penalties than simple possession and often eliminates deferred adjudication eligibility.
Drug charges in Texas are serious at every level — but they are also often defensible. With 27 years of criminal defense experience and a background as a former Dallas County prosecutor, Mike Goolsby knows how these cases are built and how to take them apart.
Contact us at (972) 394-2141 or through our online form for a free consultation. Our goal is to get your case dismissed. We handle drug cases throughout Dallas, Denton, Tarrant, and Collin counties.
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