This probably doesn't feel like a legal problem yet. Here's what it feels like: the same work for a smaller raise — or a job that cooled once they learned you were gay or transgender, or after you announced a pregnancy.
What this actually looks like
Most people don't walk in calling it “gender discrimination.” They describe a situation:
- The promotion went to a less-qualified colleague of a different sex, and the explanation changed every time you asked.
- The comments about your tone, your clothes, your “fit” — that your colleagues never hear.
- Things cooled after you came out or transitioned, after you turned down a manager, or because you don’t fit someone’s idea of how a man or woman should look or act.
- You were sidelined after announcing a pregnancy or asking about leave.
Sex discrimination means being treated worse because of sex — and the law protects men and women alike; a man passed over, underpaid, or harassed because of his sex has the same claim a woman would. Since Bostock v. Clayton County (2020) it also covers sexual orientation and gender identity. It includes unequal pay and assignments, sexual or gender-based harassment that makes the workplace hostile, and retaliation for objecting to any of it. In Texas it's prohibited by the state Human Rights Law; federally, by Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
The Texas route: TWC-CRD
In Texas, a gender discrimination charge is filed with Texas Workforce Commission — Civil Rights Division (TWC-CRD), which enforces the state Human Rights Law. The agency investigates and may attempt conciliation or hold a hearing. A complaint generally must be filed within 300 days of the discriminatory act, and the law applies to employers with 15+. Where state representation is permitted, this is the route Thurgood works through for employees in Texas.
The federal route: the EEOC
The same conduct can be filed federally with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The federal filing deadline is generally 180–300 days where a state agency exists, and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 applies to employers with 15+ employees. The EEOC and TWC-CRD typically maintain a work-sharing agreement, so one charge can be cross-filed.
The statutes & deadlines
Both systems prohibit the same core conduct and protect against retaliation. Here are the specific provisions and the clocks that run on each.
It shall be an unlawful employment practice for an employer — to fail or refuse to hire or to discharge any individual, or otherwise to discriminate against any individual with respect to his compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment, because of such individual's race, color, religion, sex, or nation
It shall be an unlawful employment practice for an employer to discriminate against any of his employees or applicants for employment [...] because he has opposed any practice made an unlawful employment practice by this subchapter, or because he has made a charge, testified, assisted, or participat
An employer commits an unlawful employment practice if because of race, color, disability, religion, sex, national origin, or age the employer: (1) fails or refuses to hire an individual, discharges an individual, or discriminates in any other manner against an individual in connection with compensation or the terms, c
An employer commits an unlawful employment practice if the employer retaliates or discriminates against a person who, under this chapter: (1) opposes a discriminatory practice; (2) makes or files a charge; (3) files a complaint; or (4) testifies, assists, or participates in any manner in an investig
What happens after you file
A charge isn't a lawsuit, and it doesn't go straight to a judge. Both agencies run an investigation first — but they end differently, and that difference is easy to miss.
Texas — TWC-CRD
- You file a verified complaint with Texas Workforce Commission — Civil Rights Division (TWC-CRD).
- The agency notifies the employer and investigates — records, witnesses, position statements.
- It issues a determination, often a probable-cause finding; many matters settle through conciliation along the way.
- Depending on the state, the agency may hold a hearing before an administrative law judge, or issue a determination and a notice of right to sue.
- Where it holds a hearing, the agency can order relief directly — back pay, damages, reinstatement, civil penalties — without a separate lawsuit.
Federal — EEOC
- You file a charge with the EEOC.
- The EEOC notifies the employer, which submits a position statement.
- The EEOC investigates and often offers mediation.
- It issues a cause / no-cause determination and attempts conciliation.
- To compel relief, the case goes to court — the EEOC can sue, or issue a right-to-sue letter so the worker can.
The contrast that's easy to miss: TWC-CRD can hold a hearing and order a remedy itself, while the EEOC investigates and conciliates but generally needs a court to force one. That's a real reason the state route can matter in Texas.
Examples of what can make a gender claim hold up
Strong claims are rarely built on a single overheard comment. They're built on quieter evidence an investigator can test. Examples of what can carry a claim:
- Comparators. A similarly situated colleague of a different sex — paid more, promoted faster, or disciplined less for the same conduct — is often worth more than any single comment.
- The shifting explanation. When the stated reason for the pay gap or the passed-over promotion keeps changing, that inconsistency reads as pretext.
- Pattern and timing. Harassment that others don't experience, or an adverse action right after you rejected advances, reported, or disclosed a pregnancy.
- Contemporaneous proof. Messages, pay records, and reviews — and an agency investigator who can compel the employer's documents.
What you can recover
Remedies generally fall into a few buckets — lost pay, money for the harm itself, and orders that change what the employer does. Under the federal damages-cap framework (shared by Title VII, the ADA, and the PWFA), only compensatory and punitive damages combined are capped, scaling with employer size; back pay, front pay, interest, and attorney's fees sit outside the cap (front pay confirmed uncapped in Pollard v. DuPont; attorney's fees for a prevailing employee). Texas's own limits differ — the table separates them.
(fed + Texas)Comp + punitive
(federal)Comp + punitive
(Texas)
The TCHRA mirrors the federal $50k–$300k caps on combined compensatory and punitive damages by employer size. Back pay and front pay are wage-based relief and fall outside these caps where available.
Results are driven by the record, and no one can guarantee an outcome.
Recent Texas changes
Texas's discrimination framework has stayed largely stable, with one notable recent expansion — and a deadline trap worth knowing.
- A 2021 expansion — for sexual-harassment claims House Bill 21 (effective September 1, 2021) extended the filing deadline for sexual-harassment claims to 300 days, applied them to employers of any size, and broadened who can be held individually liable. For other claims, including race, the limits below still apply.
- A 180-day state deadline — shorter than federal For race and most other claims, a charge with the Texas Workforce Commission Civil Rights Division must be filed within 180 days of the discriminatory act — far shorter than the federal 300-day EEOC window, a gap that catches many Texas workers. Texas Labor Code 21.202 →
- File with the TWC first Texas requires exhausting the administrative process — filing a charge with the TWC Civil Rights Division — before a discrimination suit can proceed in state court, mirroring the federal charge-first model.
Texas outcomes worth knowing
These are real EEOC sex-discrimination results for Texas employers — sexual harassment, unequal treatment in hiring and promotion, and related retaliation; some for a single worker, some splitting a settlement among a group, where the per-person share gives a clearer sense of an individual outcome. Each began as a charge of discrimination, the same way a claim like yours would. Thurgood represents employees at the agency-charge stage and does not litigate in court — these are a picture of what the route can set in motion, not a promise of any result.
- HSS Security Individual $35,000 — A hospital-security contractor in Houston offered a highly qualified woman a security-supervisor job, then rescinded the offer after two male managers objected to her hiring because of her sex. It paid $35,000 under a consent decree (2025). EEOC newsroom →
- Lone Star Ambulance Class action · 2 women $90,000 — Two female employees at a San Antonio critical-care transport company were subjected to verbal and physical sexual harassment by executives and supervisors, with one forced to resign. It paid $90,000 — about $45,000 each — under a five-year decree. EEOC newsroom →
- The Wireless Solutions Individual $30,000 — A San Antonio wireless retailer’s store manager subjected a female employee to sexual comments and demands for explicit photos. After she rejected his advances and sought to report him, the company paid $30,000 under a three-year decree. EEOC newsroom →
How Thurgood represents you
Across the country, Thurgood represents employees before federal agencies, and before state agencies where the law permits. A trained non-attorney representative — your Authorized Justice Practitioner — documents the evidence and timeline, files the formal charge, and carries you through the agency process, from employer outreach through investigation and any hearing. You can start a free evaluation using Thurgood’s CaseFile AI — once the facts are clear, you’ll be offered a free consultation with an associate who can represent your claim.
Frequently asked questions
Do I file a gender discrimination claim with Texas or the EEOC?
What is the deadline to file a gender discrimination claim in Texas?
What counts as gender discrimination at work?
Do I need a lawyer to file a gender discrimination claim in Texas?
What is the difference between TWC-CRD and going to court?
How much can I recover in a Texas gender discrimination claim?
Can I still file if I already complained to HR or went through an internal process?
A law firm turned me down — does that mean I have no claim?
Not legal advice. Thurgood is an employee-advocacy firm whose Authorized Justice Practitioners represent workers in claims before government agencies such as the EEOC, the U.S. Department of Labor, and state civil-rights and labor agencies. Thurgood practitioners are not attorneys and do not provide legal advice or represent clients in court. This article is general information, not advice about your specific situation, and it makes no promise about the outcome of any claim.