The City of McAllen has shattered its all-time sales tax record, receiving $12.6 million in February’s allocation for December collections, (2025 vs 2024) a 5.31-percent increase over the same period last year. This milestone surpasses the previous high of $11.9 million.
“McAllen is no longer simply participating in regional growth. We are defining it,” said Mayor Javier Villalobos. “As more people choose to visit, invest and shop here, the numbers tell a larger story of confidence in our vision, our connectivity to international markets and our emergence as one of Texas’ most dynamic destination cities.”
In 2025, the city generated $99.9 million in sales tax revenue (vs. $96.8 million in 2024 for a 3.23-percent YOY increase) compared to $96.8 million in 2024, representing a 3.23 percent year-over-year increase and stemming from approximately $5 billion in taxable sales. McAllen ranked No. 1 in the Rio Grande Valley for total sales tax allocation, No. 16 statewide and third in sales tax per capita among Texas cities with populations exceeding 100,000.
Sales tax revenue in McAllen is derived from the city’s two-percent rate on taxable goods and services, including retail and wholesale trade, construction, manufacturing, accommodations, food and entertainment.
“Historic revenue growth reflects a simple truth. People are choosing McAllen,” said City Manager Isaac J. Tawil. “They are coming here to shop, to invest and to experience a community that continues to shine as a true gem of the RGV. That momentum allows us to deliver exceptional quality-of-life services, maintain one of the lowest property tax rates in the region and keep building a city recognized far beyond South Texas.”
Year to date sales tax allocation is up 5.46 percent from last year. Since 2020, the city’s sales tax allocation has increased 49.7 percent, representing $33.2 million in growth.