TABC Certification Practice Test PDF (Free Printable 2026)

Download a free TABC certification practice test PDF with Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission exam questions. Print and study offline for the TABC seller-server certification.

TABC Certification Practice Test PDF (Free Printable 2026)

The tabc certification is a state-recognized seller-server credential required for anyone who sells, serves, delivers, or receives alcoholic beverages for compensation in Texas. The Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission administers the program to reduce alcohol-related incidents and protect both establishments and the public. Earning this certification shows that a seller or server understands Texas alcohol laws, can identify signs of intoxication, and knows how to refuse service safely and legally.

This free printable PDF gives you a focused set of practice questions drawn from the core content areas tested on the official exam. Download the file, print it at home or at a library, and work through each question at your own pace. Reviewing these questions before your exam session helps you identify knowledge gaps and build confidence before test day.

TABC Certification Fast Facts

What the TABC Certification Exam Covers

The seller-server exam tests knowledge across several interconnected subject areas. Understanding how these topics connect in real work situations is just as important as memorizing individual rules. The sections below summarize what you need to know for each major content area.

Texas law sets specific hours during which alcoholic beverages may be sold and served. In most areas, sales are permitted from 7:00 AM to 2:00 AM Monday through Saturday and from noon to midnight on Sundays. Some local jurisdictions have extended those Sunday hours to 1:00 AM. Mixed-beverage permit holders in certain counties may have slightly different rules, and private clubs operate under their own schedules. The legal drinking age in Texas is 21, consistent with the federal National Minimum Drinking Age Act. Sales to anyone under 21 are strictly prohibited regardless of parental presence, except for narrowly defined exceptions such as a minor's legal guardian providing the beverage in a private setting that does not involve a permitted establishment.

BYOB (Bring Your Own Bottle) rules apply differently depending on the type of permit an establishment holds. Some venues with no alcohol license allow guests to bring their own wine or beer, while others are prohibited from permitting this practice. Third-party delivery services that transport alcoholic beverages must comply with the same age-verification and sobriety requirements as in-person servers. Remote sellers shipping wine directly to consumers must hold a Direct Shipper Permit issued by the TABC.

Identifying Minors and Checking ID

Checking identification is one of the most critical responsibilities of a seller-server. Only government-issued IDs are acceptable: a Texas Driver License, a Texas Personal ID card, a U.S. passport, a military ID, or a foreign passport with a valid visa. A school ID, an expired license, or a photocopy of an ID is never sufficient. When checking ID, you must calculate the customer's age by subtracting the date of birth from today's date — not simply looking at the birth year. If a customer's birthday falls on the same calendar day as today and they are turning 21, they may be served. Spotting fake IDs involves checking for laminate bubbles, inconsistent fonts, incorrect state seal placement, and whether the physical description on the card matches the person in front of you. When in doubt, refuse service. Texas law explicitly protects a seller-server who makes a good-faith effort to verify age using a valid ID.

Recognizing Signs of Intoxication

A seller-server must monitor every customer for visible signs of intoxication throughout their visit — not just at the point of initial service. Observable signs include slurred or thick speech, glassy or bloodshot eyes, the odor of alcohol on the breath or clothing, loss of balance, stumbling, impaired coordination, mood swings, aggression, crying without an apparent cause, and difficulty handling money or understanding simple instructions. Blood alcohol concentration (BAC) effects intensify as the level rises: at 0.04–0.05 BAC a person may show subtle relaxation and minor impairment; at 0.08 BAC — the legal driving limit — motor skills and judgment are measurably impaired; at 0.15 BAC and above, serious impairment, vomiting, and blackout risk increase substantially. Body weight, gender, rate of consumption, food intake, and individual metabolism all influence how quickly BAC rises, which is why counting drinks alone is an unreliable indicator of intoxication.

Refusing Service and the Dram Shop Act

When a customer shows signs of intoxication or cannot produce valid identification, Texas law requires the seller-server to refuse further alcohol service. A refusal should be done politely and firmly — offer water, food, or a non-alcoholic beverage instead. Never argue or shame the customer, and always inform a manager immediately. Document the refusal if your establishment has a logbook. The Texas Dram Shop Act (Alcoholic Beverage Code Chapter 2) holds servers and permit holders civilly liable if they serve an obviously intoxicated person who then causes injury or death to a third party. The Safe Harbor defense is available to establishments that can prove all employees who sell or serve alcohol have completed a TABC-approved seller-server training program. This defense does not eliminate liability entirely but can significantly reduce an establishment's exposure in civil litigation. Criminal penalties for serving a minor or an intoxicated person include fines up to $4,000 and potential jail time depending on the circumstances.

Tabc Certification - TABC - Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission Certification certification study resource

After working through the printed PDF questions, return to the full tabc certification page to take timed online practice tests, review answer explanations, and measure your readiness before scheduling your official exam session.