Austin Suburb Comparison Overview
The Austin metropolitan area has grown from roughly 1.2 million people in 2010 to an estimated 2.3 million in 2026, transforming the suburbs ringing the city from quiet bedroom communities into fully realized cities with their own economic centers, cultural identities, and housing markets. For relocating families, this growth has created exceptional options — and genuine complexity in choosing between them.
School district quality, home price, property tax rate, commute time, and community character are the five lenses that most families use to evaluate suburbs. This guide applies all five — plus park access scores and HOA prevalence data — to the six suburbs that consistently dominate relocation conversations with Austin-area buyers. School ratings reference the most recent Texas Education Agency (TEA) accountability data. Property tax rates are effective total-rate estimates including city, county, school district, and applicable MUD levies, verifiable through the relevant county appraisal district.
Data note: Median home prices reflect the family-home tier ($350K–$750K) in each suburb as of early 2026. All figures should be verified with current public records. Tax data: Travis CAD, Williamson CAD, and Hays CAD. School boundaries: verify directly with each district before making address decisions.
Figure 1: Austin family suburb comparison matrix 2026 — median home price, school rating (TEA), commute to downtown, park score, and effective property tax rate. Gold cells = top performer in each column. All figures approximate.
Round Rock: Sports, Schools & Value
Round Rock at a Glance
Round Rock is Austin’s most established outer suburb — a city of approximately 140,000 with Dell Technologies as its economic anchor, a complete community identity, and Round Rock ISD as one of Texas’s highest-rated large school districts. The city’s official resources at roundrocktexas.gov detail its parks, planning, and municipal services.
Round Rock ISD serves approximately 50,000 students across 62+ campuses. The district’s TEA “A” rating at the district level, multiple campuses ranked in the state’s top percentiles, and programs including IB, dual-language, and extensive career and technical education (CTE) pathways make it the first choice for families who prioritize comprehensive academic breadth alongside strong outcomes.
Old Settlers Park, a 645-acre regional park, provides athletic tournament fields, disc golf, lake fishing, and miles of nature trails — one of the best municipal park systems in the Austin metro. Dell Diamond hosts the Round Rock Express (AAA baseball) and serves as a genuine community anchor for family entertainment. The premium outlet mall and major retail corridors provide commercial amenity depth that smaller suburbs cannot match.
- Round Rock ISD — TEA “A” rated, top 10% of Texas districts
- Dell Technologies campus — major employer, economic stabilizer
- Old Settlers Park — 645 acres, sports, trails, lake
- Dell Diamond — AAA baseball, family entertainment anchor
- Round Rock Premium Outlets — major regional retail destination
- Multiple MetroRail stations within commuting distance
Cedar Park: Lake Travis & Arena District
Cedar Park at a Glance
Cedar Park combines Leander ISD school quality with proximity to Lake Travis, the H-E-B Center arena, and the Capital MetroRail Red Line at Lakeline Station — giving it a lifestyle depth that justifies its modest price premium over Leander proper. The city’s official resources are available at cedarparktexas.gov.
The H-E-B Center at Cedar Park, a 9,000-seat arena hosting the Texas Stars (AHL hockey) and Austin Spurs (NBA G League basketball), is a genuine family entertainment anchor that distinguishes Cedar Park from all other Austin suburbs. The arena’s presence has attracted a dense ring of restaurants, bars, and retail that creates a walkable entertainment zone unusual for a suburban Texas community.
Cedar Park’s proximity to Lake Travis — approximately 15 minutes via RM 620 — gives residents waterfront recreation access that most north Austin suburbs cannot offer. Marinas on the lake’s eastern shore are easily reachable for weekend boating, and the lake corridor has attracted waterfront dining and entertainment venues that have enhanced Cedar Park’s recreational appeal. The Capital MetroRail Red Line at Lakeline Station provides a rail commute alternative to driving, a meaningful differentiator for families with downtown-office obligations.
Pflugerville: Tech Corridor Affordability
Pflugerville at a Glance
Pflugerville offers the Austin metro’s best combination of Travis County location, affordable home prices, and short downtown commute. Its position along the US-183 and TX-130 corridors places it directly adjacent to the tech employment spine running from Apple’s North Austin campus to Samsung’s Taylor facility. Municipal services and planning are detailed at pflugervilletx.gov.
Pflugerville ISD serves approximately 26,000 students and has been investing consistently in new facilities and program development. The district’s TEA “B+” rating reflects genuine academic achievement, with standout campuses in newer northwest Pflugerville communities benefiting from recent enrollment growth and the associated tax base expansion that funds program investment.
At $400K median, Pflugerville offers family-sized homes at prices $85K–$110K below Cedar Park and Round Rock, making it the most compelling value play in Travis County for families who prioritize proximity to Austin over the highest school district ratings. Typhoon Texas water park (largest in the Austin metro), Lake Pflugerville (3-mile trail loop, kayaking, fishing), and convenient access to Stone Hill Town Center retail provide meaningful quality-of-life depth. Note that MUD surcharges in newer developments push effective tax rates to 2.45%+ — verify property-specific rates before making any offer.
Georgetown: Historic Charm & Fast Growth
Georgetown at a Glance
Georgetown has been ranked by the U.S. Census Bureau as one of the fastest-growing cities in America for multiple consecutive years. Its Victorian-era downtown square, lowest effective property tax rate in this comparison, and Texas A&M Health campus make it uniquely appealing among Austin suburbs. Official city resources are at georgetowntx.org.
Georgetown ISD has expanded rapidly to accommodate a student population that has roughly doubled in a decade. The district’s TEA “B+” rating reflects solid achievement with active investment in new campuses and programs — and families who buy in Georgetown today are investing in a district on an upward trajectory.
Georgetown’s lifestyle differentiator is genuine and rare among Texas suburbs: its walkable downtown square anchored by the Williamson County Courthouse offers independent restaurants, boutiques, coffee shops, and cultural programming that no other Austin suburb can match. Southwestern University adds an educated community dimension and cultural calendar. The Wolf Ranch Town Center provides major retail, dining, and entertainment. Georgetown’s effective property tax rate of approximately 2.10% — the lowest among suburbs compared here — compounds meaningfully over a 10–30 year hold period, representing tens of thousands of dollars in savings versus higher-rate alternatives.
- Historic downtown square — walkable dining, boutiques, entertainment
- Southwestern University — liberal arts, cultural programming
- Texas A&M Health Georgetown — growing healthcare employment
- Wolf Ranch Town Center — major retail and entertainment hub
- Lowest effective property tax rate (~2.10%) among suburbs compared
- Blue Hole Regional Park — beloved swimming hole and nature reserve
Leander: MetroRail & New Master-Plans
Leander at a Glance
Leander is the northern terminus of Capital Metro’s Red Line MetroRail — a genuine differentiator that gives residents a rail commute option to downtown Austin unavailable in most other suburbs. Combined with Leander ISD’s “A” rating and extensive new master-planned community development, Leander offers exceptional value for school-focused families. City resources are at leandertx.gov.
Leander ISD, serving approximately 45,000 students across 44+ campuses, is one of Texas’s largest and best school districts — its TEA “A” rating, consistent top-tier accountability scores, and robust programming (performing arts, athletics, dual-enrollment college courses) make it the primary driver of home values across the Cedar Park–Leander corridor.
New construction is a defining feature of the Leander market. Master-planned communities like Bryson, Crystal Falls, Mason Hills, and Travisso offer brand-new homes with resort-style amenity packages — pools, trails, fitness centers, community events — at prices $80K–$100K below comparable Cedar Park properties. For families who want the new-home experience without compromising on school quality, Leander represents the strongest value proposition in the Austin metro. The MetroRail connection eliminates the commute anxiety that pushes many north-suburban families toward Round Rock or Pflugerville instead.
Bee Cave & Lakeway: Hill Country Schools
Bee Cave / Lakeway at a Glance
Bee Cave and Lakeway offer something no other suburb on this list can match: access to Eanes ISD — the highest-rated school district in the Austin metropolitan area — in a Hill Country setting with Lake Travis proximity, upscale retail at the Hill Country Galleria, and a residential character that bridges the gap between true suburbs and luxury community living.
Eanes ISD — serving West Lake Hills, Rollingwood, and the Bee Cave/Lakeway corridor — consistently ranks as one of the top five school districts in Texas and among the best public school systems in the American South. Lake Travis High School (within Bee Cave/Lakeway) and Westlake High School (within the broader Eanes district) both produce exceptional academic outcomes and compete at the highest levels in athletics, fine arts, and academic competitions. For families who treat school district quality as a non-negotiable — and are willing to pay a premium for it — Bee Cave and Lakeway are the logical outer-suburb choice.
The Hill Country Galleria in Bee Cave provides an upscale retail and dining environment that most suburbs cannot approach — Whole Foods Market, quality restaurant tenants, and a design aesthetic that feels closer to a lifestyle center than a strip mall. Lake Travis is within 10 minutes for boating, kayaking, and waterfront dining. New construction in the Lakeway and Rough Hollow communities delivers modern floor plans with Hill Country views at price points that reflect the Eanes ISD premium. The effective tax rate of approximately 2.20% — lower than Round Rock, Leander, and Pflugerville — partially offsets the higher home price for long-term buyers.
How to Choose the Right Austin Suburb
The right Austin suburb is not the one with the highest school rating or the lowest home price — it is the one that best aligns with your family’s specific combination of priorities. Here is a decision framework based on the most common relocation conversations:
| Your Top Priority | Best Suburb | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Highest school district rating | Bee Cave / Lakeway | Eanes ISD, TEA A / 94 |
| Top schools + lowest price | Leander | Leander ISD (A / 90) at $430K median |
| Shortest commute to downtown | Pflugerville | 25–35 min via TX-130 |
| Lowest property tax rate | Georgetown | ~2.10% effective rate |
| Community character + walkability | Georgetown | Historic downtown square, unique in Austin suburbs |
| Rail commute option | Leander or Cedar Park | Capital MetroRail Red Line terminus / Lakeline station |
| New construction + amenity package | Leander | Bryson, Crystal Falls, Mason Hills master-plans |
| Entertainment + arena venue | Cedar Park | H-E-B Center (AHL, G-League) |
Agent’s recommendation: Before touring any suburb, request a property-specific tax estimate from your agent — not a county average — and map the exact school campus boundaries for the addresses you’re considering. In large districts like Round Rock ISD and Leander ISD, campus-level performance varies significantly. The TEA’s accountability portal allows you to look up any individual Texas campus by name or location. Always verify school assignments with the district directly before submitting an offer.
Frequently Asked Questions: Austin Family Suburbs 2026
Which Austin suburb has the best schools in 2026?
Bee Cave and Lakeway offer access to Eanes ISD, the highest-rated district in the Austin metro (TEA A / 94). Among outer suburbs, Round Rock ISD (A / 92) and Leander ISD (A / 90) are the gold standard — both large, well-resourced districts with top-performing campuses and broad program offerings. Always verify individual campus ratings at tea.texas.gov for specific addresses before making any offer.
What is the most affordable Austin suburb with good schools in 2026?
Leander offers the best value combination: Leander ISD (TEA A / 90) at a median home price of approximately $430K. Georgetown provides the lowest effective property tax rate (~2.10%) at a $450K median, compounding meaningfully in long-term ownership costs. Pflugerville at $400K is the most affordable Travis County option with a solid B+ rated district. Note that higher tax rates in some of these communities can reduce the purchase-price advantage when budgeting total housing costs.
Which Austin suburb is growing fastest?
Georgetown has been ranked by the U.S. Census Bureau as one of the fastest-growing cities in the United States for multiple consecutive years, driven by new master-planned communities, the Texas A&M Health campus, and an appeal to families and retirees alike. Leander has also posted exceptional population growth, fueled by the MetroRail terminus and extensive new construction. Both cities’ infrastructure investment has kept pace with growth better than many comparable high-growth Texas communities.
What is the commute time from Austin suburbs to downtown?
Round Rock: 30–45 min via I-35. Cedar Park: 35–50 min via US-183 or 183A toll road — or via Capital MetroRail Red Line from Lakeline Station. Pflugerville: 25–35 min via TX-130 (least congested). Georgetown: 45–60 min via I-35 (most challenging). Leander: 35–50 min driving or via MetroRail Red Line terminus. Bee Cave/Lakeway: 30–45 min via TX-71 or RM 620.
Does Leander have public transit to downtown Austin?
Yes — Leander is the northern terminus of Capital Metro’s Red Line MetroRail, which connects directly to downtown Austin’s Plaza Saltillo and Austin Convention Center stations. Cedar Park’s Lakeline Station also connects to the same rail line. This gives Leander and Cedar Park residents a meaningful alternative to I-35 and US-183 during peak commute hours — a genuine quality-of-life differentiator not available in Round Rock, Georgetown, Pflugerville, or Bee Cave.
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