(a) In this section:
(1) “Disability” and “mobility problem that substantially impairs a person‘s ability to ambulate” have the meanings assigned by § 681.001.
(2) “Legally blind” means a condition described by § 681.001(2)(B) or (C).
(3) “Practice of optometry” and “practice of therapeutic optometry” have the meanings assigned by § 351.002, Occupations Code.
(b) The department shall issue specialty license plates for a motor vehicle that:
(1) has a gross vehicle weight of 18,000 pounds or less; and
(2) is regularly operated for noncommercial use by or for the transportation of a person with a permanent disability.

Terms Used In Texas Transportation Code 504.201

  • Person: includes corporation, organization, government or governmental subdivision or agency, business trust, estate, trust, partnership, association, and any other legal entity. See Texas Government Code 311.005
  • Written: includes any representation of words, letters, symbols, or figures. See Texas Government Code 311.005

(c) An owner of a motor vehicle regularly operated by or for the transportation of a person described by Subsection (a) may apply to the department for registration under this section.
(d) Except as provided by Subsection (d-1), the initial application for specialty license plates under this section must be accompanied by a written statement from a physician who is licensed to practice medicine in this state or in a state adjacent to this state or who is authorized by applicable law to practice medicine in a hospital or other health facility of the Department of Veterans Affairs. If the applicant has a mobility problem caused by a disorder of the foot, the written statement may be issued by a person licensed to practice podiatry in this state or a state adjacent to this state. In this subsection, “podiatry” has the meaning assigned by § 681.001. The statement must certify that the person making the application or on whose behalf the application is made is legally blind or has a mobility problem that substantially impairs the person’s ability to ambulate. The statement must also certify whether a mobility problem is temporary or permanent. A written statement is not required as acceptable medical proof if:
(1) the person with a disability:
(A) has had a limb, hand, or foot amputated; or
(B) must use a wheelchair; and
(2) the applicant executes a statement attesting to the person’s disability before the county assessor-collector.
(d-1) If the initial application for specialty license plates under this section is made by or on behalf of a person who is legally blind, the written statement required by Subsection (d) may be issued by a person licensed to engage in the practice of optometry or the practice of therapeutic optometry in this state or a state adjacent to this state.
(e) A person with a disability may receive:
(1) one disabled parking placard under § 681.002 if the person receives a set of license plates under this section; or
(2) two disabled parking placards under § 681.002 if the person does not receive a set of license plates under this section.
(f) A license plate issued under this section must include the symbol of access adopted by Rehabilitation International in 1969 at its Eleventh World Congress on Rehabilitation of the Disabled. The symbol must be the same size as the numbers on the license plate.
(g) In addition to a license plate issued under this section, an eligible person is entitled to be issued a set of the license plates for each motor vehicle owned by the person that has a gross vehicle weight of 18,000 pounds or less and is equipped with special equipment that:
(1) is designed to allow a person who has lost the use of one or both of the person’s legs to operate the vehicle; and
(2) is not standard equipment on that type of vehicle for use by a person who has use of both legs.
(h) Repealed by Acts 2011, 82nd Leg., R.S., Ch. 1296, Sec. 247(9), eff. January 1, 2012.