You hold a Texas alcohol permit, you teach seller-server classes, or you just want to verify that the bar down the street is licensed correctly. Whatever brought you here, the answer lives in one place: AIMS, the Alcohol Industry Management System. The Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission (TABC) rebuilt its entire licensing and compliance pipeline around AIMS, and as of 2026 it handles every application, renewal, certification check, and public records lookup the agency offers.
This guide walks through what AIMS actually does, how to log in without losing your mind, why the system rejects so many first-time applications, and how to use the public-facing tools for license verification. We will also dig into the seller-server certification flow, the mobile experience, the Mark of Trust seal program, and the new API that lets compliance software pull data directly from TABC.
If you have ever stared at a frozen renewal screen at 11:47 pm the night before your permit expires, this article is for you. If you are a hiring manager trying to confirm that the bartender you just interviewed actually holds a current TABC card, this is also for you. And if you are a developer building compliance tooling, the API section toward the end has what you need to get started.
AIMS launched in September 2021 and finished swallowing the last paper-based TABC workflow in early 2023. Before AIMS, license holders bounced between three legacy systems, a mail-in renewal process, and a fax line that nobody under forty had ever used. The Commission consolidated all of it into a single web portal hosted at aims.tabc.texas.gov.
The system serves four distinct user groups, and the experience changes depending on who you are when you log in.
License holders see a dashboard of every permit they own, renewal countdown timers, fee balances, and submission history. Certification schools see rosters of every student they have ever certified, plus tools to issue or void seller-server cards. TABC staff see audit trails, inspection records, and the compliance engine. And the general public sees a stripped-down search interface that requires no login at all.
The Commission reports that AIMS reduced average application processing time from 45 days to under 12, and renewal turnaround from 21 days to 72 hours when nothing is flagged. Those numbers matter because Texas runs the second-largest alcohol regulatory operation in the country, behind only California, with roughly 54,000 active permits and more than 1.2 million current seller-server certifications.
The migration was not painless. Between September 2021 and March 2022, license holders reported widespread issues with data that did not transfer cleanly from the legacy systems. Old violations showed up against the wrong permits, expiration dates drifted by a few days in either direction, and registered agent fields were occasionally blank. TABC ran a dedicated data-cleanup team for almost a year to reconcile the records, and most of those issues are gone now. If you held a permit before 2021, it is still worth opening your AIMS profile and confirming that everything looks right.
The Alcohol Industry Management System is the official TABC portal for every license type Texas issues, every certification credential, and every public records request. It is free to access, requires a verified email for account creation, and operates on a five-year permit cycle for most license classes. You do not need an account to search public records or verify a seller-server certificate.
Most people fall into one of four buckets, and each one sees a different version of the dashboard.
If you operate a bar, restaurant, liquor store, brewery, winery, distillery, distributor, or any of the 75-plus permit subtypes TABC issues, AIMS is your home base. You apply here, renew here, pay surcharges here, file ownership changes here, and respond to compliance inquiries here. The dashboard surfaces a renewal banner 90, 60, and 30 days before expiration, and the system will not let you submit a renewal with outstanding fines or unresolved violations.
Approved seller-server schools use AIMS to issue certificates the moment a student passes the exam. The portal generates a unique certificate number, ties it to the student's name and date of birth, and pushes it into the public verification database within seconds. Schools also use AIMS to renew their own certifying authority, which expires every two years.
Anyone can search the public side without creating an account. You enter a business name, address, or permit number and AIMS returns the license status, expiration date, permit type, and whether any active violations exist. This is what insurance underwriters, landlords, lawyers, and curious customers use.
Agents log in through a separate single sign-on and see inspection forms, violation history, audit queues, and the routing engine that assigns cases to field offices. The public never sees this layer.
Free lookup by business name, street address, owner name, or permit number. No login required and no rate limit for casual users. Returns license status, expiration date, permit class, and any active or recent violation history attached to the permit.
End-to-end online applications for all 75-plus permit subtypes including mixed-beverage, wine-and-beer retailer, brewer, distillery, and distributor classes. Auto-saves every few seconds, validates fees against the current schedule, and flags missing documents before submission.
Confirms seller-server, manager, and certifying-school credentials in real time using a 10-digit certificate number. Used by employers, point-of-sale systems, and TABC field agents daily to confirm that a card on file is still valid.
Downloadable high-resolution PNG and SVG seal for license holders with a 24-month clean compliance record. Displays on storefronts, websites, menus, and online business profiles, with an embedded QR code linking back to live verification.
Pay renewal fees, late penalties, excise surcharges, and reinstatement charges. Supports ACH bank draft, all major credit cards with a small processing fee, and certified check for high-value transactions like new distillery applications.
Email and SMS alerts for upcoming renewals, new violations, policy changes, and required document submissions. Configurable per user with separate channels for the owner, the registered agent, and any designated compliance officer on the account.
Account creation is straightforward in theory and infuriating in practice if you skip a step. Go to aims.tabc.texas.gov and click Register. The system asks for a valid email, a strong password, and two security questions. Then it sends a verification link with a 24-hour expiration. Miss that window and you start over with a different email address, because AIMS will refuse to issue a second verification to the same inbox.
Once verified, you link your account to existing permits using the TABC permit number printed on your current license. The system cross-references the business name, federal EIN, and registered agent before granting access. If any of those three fields are stale in TABC records, the link fails silently and customer service has to fix it manually.
Returning users log in with email and password. Two-factor authentication became mandatory in March 2024 for all license-holder accounts, and AIMS supports authenticator apps, SMS codes, or backup codes. The public search side has no login at all.
Texas requires anyone who serves or sells alcohol to hold a current TABC-approved seller-server certificate. The card is valid for two years, costs the school somewhere between $11 and $20 to issue, and lives entirely inside AIMS once printed. Paper certificates were phased out in 2023, which means the laminated card your manager keeps in a drawer is no longer the official record. The official record is whatever AIMS says it is.
The flow works like this. A student registers with an approved school, completes the training, and passes the final exam. The school logs into AIMS, enters the student's full legal name, date of birth, and email, then clicks Issue Certificate. AIMS generates a 10-digit certificate number, stamps an issue date and expiration date, and emails the student a PDF copy within roughly 30 seconds. The student can also pull the certificate from their own AIMS account if they create one, though most never bother.
Employers verify the certificate by entering the number into the public AIMS search. The system returns the holder's name, expiration date, and issuing school. If a certificate is voided for cheating or training fraud, the verification page shows a red banner and the date of revocation. Roughly 1.2 million active certificates sit in the database at any given time, and a good chunk of those belong to part-time workers cycling through hospitality jobs.
Renewals require a fresh class. AIMS will not let a student renew an expired certificate, and the holder cannot legally serve until the new card is issued. Plan for at least 48 hours between class completion and your next shift, because the school still has to log in and trigger the issuance even though the system itself is instant.
Schools occasionally make mistakes when entering student data, and AIMS lets them void and reissue within a 72-hour window without paying a second fee. Beyond 72 hours the school eats the cost of the corrected certificate. Students who notice a typo on their PDF should email the school the same day rather than waiting.
TABC introduced the Mark of Trust seal in late 2022 as a visible credential for compliant license holders. Businesses with no active violations in the prior 24 months can download a high-resolution PNG and SVG of the seal from their AIMS dashboard. Many restaurants and bars now display it on the front door, on menus, and in online listings, and Yelp and Google business profiles can embed the verification URL directly.
The seal is not just decorative. AIMS ties it to a verification URL, so anyone scanning the QR code on the printed seal lands on a confirmation page showing the license is in good standing. If the holder picks up a violation, the seal is revoked automatically and the verification page updates within 24 hours. That last detail matters more than it sounds, because it means a business cannot keep displaying the seal after a violation hits without exposing itself to a fraud claim.
Roughly 38,000 Texas businesses currently carry the seal. Insurance carriers in some regions offer modest premium discounts for displaying it, and at least two major hotel chains require it for in-room minibar contracts. Convention venues in Austin, Dallas, and Houston have started asking caterers for proof of the seal before signing service contracts, especially for high-profile events where any compliance hiccup would make local news.
Getting the seal back after a violation is straightforward but slow. Once the violation is resolved and the 24-month clean window restarts, AIMS automatically restores download access. There is no application, no fee, and no separate review. The system just watches the compliance record and flips the switch.
AIMS is a responsive web app, not a native mobile app, and TABC has been clear that no native app is on the roadmap. The browser experience on phones is functional for license search, certificate verification, and payment, but full applications and renewals are painful on a small screen because the forms are long and the file upload widgets fight with mobile browsers. If you absolutely have to file from a phone, use the desktop-site toggle in Chrome or Safari, because the mobile layout hides some required fields below the fold without warning.
For developers and compliance vendors, TABC published a public REST API in mid-2024. The API exposes license search, certification verification, and permit status endpoints with rate limits of 1,000 requests per hour for free keys and 50,000 per hour for approved commercial partners. Documentation lives at aims.tabc.texas.gov/developers, and the schema follows OpenAPI 3.1. Authentication uses standard API keys passed as bearer tokens, and the rate-limit headers behave the same way most modern APIs do.
Compliance software vendors have built integrations that pull TABC status nightly, flag licenses approaching expiration, and surface violations to corporate compliance teams. Several point-of-sale platforms now verify seller-server certificates at clock-in using the same endpoints, which has cut down on the old practice of staff swapping cards to cover for an expired coworker.
Recent feature releases worth noting: bulk certificate upload for large training schools (April 2025), Spanish-language interface across all public pages (August 2025), and a redesigned application wizard for distillery permits that cut average completion time by 41% (January 2026). On the roadmap for 2026 are a unified login that bridges TABC and Texas Comptroller systems for sales-tax reporting, plus a redesigned violations dashboard that lets license holders respond to inquiries inline rather than uploading PDFs.
The TABC contact center publishes quarterly stats on application rejections, and the same three issues dominate the list every cycle. Knowing them in advance saves weeks of back-and-forth.
First, certificate of formation mismatches. The business name on your Secretary of State filing must match the AIMS application character for character. The Brewery LLC is not the same as The Brewery, LLC as far as the validation engine is concerned. Pull your filing before you start.
Second, lease and ownership documentation. AIMS demands a fully executed lease or deed showing the licensed premises. Letters of intent, draft leases, and verbal agreements all get rejected. If your build-out is not finished, you can apply for a conditional permit but the document requirement does not relax.
Third, fingerprint cards. Every principal of the business needs IdentoGO fingerprints submitted under the TABC service code. The cards expire after 90 days, and AIMS rejects applications that reference expired prints. Schedule the appointment as one of the first steps, not the last.
Beyond those three, watch the surety bond requirement for certain permit classes. The bond must be issued by an approved Texas insurer and uploaded as a PDF, not a photo. JPEGs and HEIC files are rejected by the document validator without explanation.
AIMS is the operational core of every TABC interaction in Texas, and it is not going anywhere. The Commission has invested heavily in the platform, the API ecosystem is maturing, and the public-facing tools have eliminated most of the friction that used to surround license verification.
For license holders, the system is faster than what it replaced once you get past the initial setup. For certification students, the digital card means no more lost paper certificates and no more hunting down replacement copies. For the general public, what used to require a phone call and a callback now takes ten seconds in a browser.
The friction points that remain (session timeouts, the email-change process, occasional SMS delivery problems) are real but manageable with the workarounds covered above. If you are new to TABC compliance, bookmark aims.tabc.texas.gov, set up your authenticator app today, and pull your permit certificate so the linking step works the first time. Save your security-question answers in a password manager, because losing access to those means a notarized recovery request and a multi-week wait.
And if you are studying for the seller-server exam itself, work through the practice questions before sitting the official test. The pass rate is high for prepared candidates and surprisingly low for those who walk in cold. The exam is not designed to trick anyone, but the wording on questions about minors, intoxication signs, and acceptable ID types catches people who skipped the study guide. A couple of hours of practice questions usually closes that gap, and AIMS will have the certificate in your email before you finish lunch.