GREWAL RE GROUP COMPASS RE TEXAS · LUXURY RELOCATION SPECIALISTS Austin Relocation Guide 2026 Your complete guide to moving to Austin, Texas NEIGHBORHOOD MATCH BY BUYER PROFILE Tech Workers Young Professionals Families Retirees Outdoors Lovers Entrepreneurs Mueller Westlake East Austin Cedar Park Lakeway Tarrytown Top Pick Good Fit grewalregroup.com · (512) 617-0001 · Compass RE Texas
Relocation Guide

Austin Relocation Guide 2026: Everything You Need to Know Before You Move

Austin, Texas is one of America's fastest-growing cities, and for good reason. No state income tax, a booming tech economy anchored by Tesla, Apple, Google, Oracle, and Dell, warm weather, live music on every corner, and a culture that somehow blends Southern hospitality with Silicon Valley ambition. Whether you're a tech worker transferring from the Bay Area, a remote worker craving lower costs, a retiree chasing the sun, or an entrepreneur ready to build something new, this 2026 Austin relocation guide covers every decision you'll need to make, neighborhoods, commutes, moving costs, Texas residency, climate prep, and the cultural nuances only locals know.

Who Is Moving to Austin in 2026?

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Austin-Round Rock-Georgetown has been among the fastest-growing metro areas in the country for over a decade. In 2026, that growth continues across five major demographic groups:

Tech Workers

Employees relocating to Tesla's Gigafactory, Apple's North Austin campus, Oracle HQ, Google, Meta, and dozens of mid-size tech companies are the single largest driver of Austin's growth. Many arrive from San Francisco, Seattle, or New York.

Remote Workers

The post-pandemic remote revolution made Texas taxes + Texas space a compelling combo. Workers keeping California or New York salaries while paying zero state income tax gain $20,000–$45,000/year in after-tax income.

Retirees

Austin's mild winters, world-class medical facilities (UT Dell Medical, St. David's, Seton), and absence of state income tax on retirement income make it increasingly attractive for Sun Belt retirees.

Entrepreneurs

Low regulation, no corporate income tax, a deep talent pool from UT Austin, and a dense startup ecosystem (Capital Factory, ATX Seed Fund, 1 Convergence) have made Austin a top-5 startup city in the US.

Young Professionals

Graduates from UT Austin, Texas A&M, and other state schools increasingly stay in Austin rather than migrate to coastal cities. East Austin, South Congress, and Mueller are their natural habitats.

Families

High-rated school districts in Westlake, Round Rock, and Cedar Park, combined with suburban safety and more square footage per dollar than coastal cities, attract families from across the country.

Best Austin Neighborhoods by Lifestyle

Austin's geography matters enormously. The city sprawls across more than 300 square miles, and choosing the wrong neighborhood for your lifestyle means frustrating commutes, misaligned amenities, or simply not fitting the vibe. Here is a curated breakdown:

For Families: Schools, Safety, and Space

Westlake Hills / West Lake Hills is the gold standard for Austin families. The Eanes Independent School District consistently ranks in the top 1% of Texas districts. Homes range from $1.2M bungalows to $8M+ estates with Hill Country views. Traffic toward downtown can be challenging, but the trade-off in school quality is hard to beat.

Round Rock offers excellent Round Rock ISD schools, more affordable prices (entry-level homes from the mid-$400s), and a family-friendly suburban environment. Dell's headquarters adds corporate stability to the local economy. Round Rock is one of the few Austin suburbs with a genuine downtown district, excellent parks, and the beloved Round Rock Donuts.

Cedar Park sits at the northwest edge of the metro, offering Leander ISD schools (highly rated), proximity to Apple's campus, and newer construction neighborhoods with modern amenities. Home prices run $450K–$900K, making it more accessible than Westlake while still offering top-tier schools.

For Young Professionals: Walkability, Nightlife, and Culture

East Austin is Austin's Brooklyn, industrial turned artsy, now firmly established as a neighborhood of coffee shops, cocktail bars, breweries, food trucks, and murals. Home prices have risen dramatically (condos from $500K, bungalows from $700K+), but the cultural density remains unmatched in Austin.

South Congress / SoCo remains one of Austin's most iconic stretches. Living near South Congress means walkable access to some of the best restaurants, boutiques, and venues in the city. Expect to pay a premium, townhomes and condos from $600K, single-family homes from $900K+.

Mueller is a planned urban neighborhood built on the grounds of Austin's former airport. It offers a remarkable blend of walkability (rare for Austin), parks, a farmers market, the Alamo Drafthouse, coffee shops, and a genuine neighborhood feel. Mueller is a favorite of tech workers who want urban convenience without the full downtown density. Homes run $500K–$1.2M.

For Outdoors Lovers: Lakes, Hills, and Trails

Spicewood sits west of Austin along the shores of Lake Travis, offering Hill Country terrain, lake access, and a quiet rural-ish lifestyle that is increasingly appealing to remote workers who don't need to commute daily.

Lakeway is a polished lakeside community west of Austin on Lake Travis. It combines upscale amenities (Lakeway Resort, multiple marinas, Baylor Scott & White Medical Center) with stunning scenery. Home prices from $600K to $3M+.

For Luxury Buyers: Prestige, Privacy, and Views

Tarrytown is Austin's original old-money neighborhood, tree-shaded streets, Tudor revival architecture, proximity to Lake Austin and Barton Creek, and a zip code (78703) that carries genuine cache. Expect to pay $1.5M–$6M+ for a well-appointed home.

Westlake Hills + Lake Travis combines the prestige of Eanes ISD with spectacular Hill Country and lake views. This corridor, from Rollingwood through Bee Cave to Lakeway, hosts Austin's highest concentration of $3M+ homes and a luxury lifestyle second to none in the region.

Austin-Bergstrom International Airport (AUS)

One of Austin's frequently underappreciated assets is Austin-Bergstrom International Airport (AUS), a modern, well-run airport with direct flights to virtually every major U.S. city. From Austin you can fly nonstop to:

The airport is located southeast of downtown, roughly 15–25 minutes from most Austin neighborhoods (depending on traffic and time of day). Major carriers including Southwest, American, United, Delta, Alaska, Spirit, and Frontier all operate significant service from AUS.

Austin Neighborhoods by Commute to Major Employers

One of the most important relocation decisions in Austin is choosing a neighborhood with a manageable commute to your employer. Austin traffic, especially on I-35, can turn a 12-mile commute into a 45-minute ordeal. Here is a commute-centric neighborhood guide for Austin's major employers:

Employer Location Best Neighborhoods Avg. Commute
Tesla Gigafactory TX Del Valle (SE Austin) Del Valle, Manor, SE Austin, Pflugerville 10–30 min
Apple Campus North Austin (Domain) Cedar Park, Leander, North Austin, Pflugerville 15–35 min
Oracle HQ Northwest Austin (Lakeline) Lakeway, Cedar Park, Northwest Austin 15–30 min
Dell HQ Round Rock Round Rock, Pflugerville, North Austin 10–25 min
Google Austin Downtown / Domain Central Austin, Mueller, East Austin, Domain area 10–25 min
University of Texas Central Austin Hyde Park, North Loop, Mueller, Central Austin 5–20 min
Downtown Austin Central / CBD East Austin, SoCo, Travis Heights, Bouldin Creek 5–20 min
Samsung Austin Semi. Taylor (NE Austin) Taylor, Hutto, Georgetown, Round Rock 20–45 min

Austin Traffic Reality Check

Let's be honest about Austin traffic, it is a real challenge that surprises many relocators. The Bureau of Labor Statistics data and multiple commute studies consistently rank Austin among the worst mid-size cities for traffic congestion.

The core problem is I-35, the main north-south artery that bisects the city. Originally designed for far lower volumes, I-35 has been under some form of construction or improvement since the 1990s. The TxDOT I-35 Capital Express project (now underway) will eventually improve things, but construction itself adds chaos in the near term.

Traffic Reality by Route: I-35 (avoid during rush hour whenever possible) · MoPac / Loop 1 (better, but congested during peaks) · 183 / Research Blvd (decent off-peak, backs up badly) · 71 / Ben White (manageable for south and east travel) · 360 / Capital of Texas Highway (best scenic route west but can back up) · 130 (toll road alternative to I-35, highly recommended for North Austin to South Austin travel)

Practical traffic advice for Austin newcomers:

Cost of Moving to Austin: What to Budget

Interstate moving costs vary significantly depending on your origin, home size, and the level of service you hire. Here is a realistic 2026 cost breakdown:

$3K
Studio / 1BR from nearby state
$6K
2–3BR mid-distance move
$12K+
Full home, coast-to-coast
$15K+
Large home, full-service, long distance

Full-service interstate moves, where the movers pack, load, transport, unload, and unpack, run $3,000–$15,000+ for most households. Moving from California or the Northeast to Austin represents one of the longer, costlier routes. Budget generously and get at least three quotes from AMSA-certified movers.

Cost reduction strategies: Moving mid-week (Tuesday–Thursday) and mid-month (10th–20th) typically saves 15–25% vs. peak weekend/end-of-month pricing. Portable container services (PODS, U-Pack) can save 30–40% over full-service for those willing to do their own packing. Moving in winter (January–February) is the cheapest time to hire full-service movers to Austin.

Additional moving budget items to plan for:

Establishing Texas Residency: Your 90-Day Checklist

Texas law requires new residents to complete several official steps within 90 days of establishing domicile in the state. Missing these deadlines can result in fines. Here is what you need to do, and in what order:

Austin Climate: Preparing for Texas Heat

Austin sits in the Texas Hill Country transition zone, hot and semi-arid in summer, mild in winter, with occasional severe weather events (ice storms in winter, severe thunderstorms in spring). Relocators from the Pacific Coast, Midwest, and Northeast are frequently caught off guard by the intensity of an Austin summer.

What to Expect by Season

Practical Heat Preparation for Northerners and West Coasters

Austin Culture: What Surprises Every Newcomer

Austin is a genuinely unique American city, a progressive liberal enclave in a conservative state, a live music capital with world-class tech infrastructure, a BBQ city with Michelin-worthy restaurants, and a place where "weird" is an official civic identity. Here is what surprises most newcomers:

The Political Paradox

Austin voted heavily Democratic in recent elections while the state of Texas remains broadly Republican. This creates interesting tensions, Austin's city policies and culture lean strongly progressive, while state law often overrides local ordinances on issues from ride-sharing regulations to land use. The political landscape is a conversation topic at every Austin dinner party.

Live Music is Literally Everywhere

Austin's "Live Music Capital of the World" designation is not marketing fluff. On any given Friday night, you can hear world-class live music at dozens of venues across the city, from the legendary Sixth Street corridor to the intimate stages of White Horse honky-tonk, the Hole in the Wall on Guadalupe, or ACL Live at the Moody Center. SXSW every March turns Austin into the center of the global music industry for two weeks.

BBQ Culture is Sacred

Central Texas BBQ is a religion, and Austin is a pilgrimage site. Franklin Barbecue (consistently ranked the best in America) draws lines of 2–3 hours before opening. La Barbecue, Micklethwait, Terry Black's, and LeRoy and Lewis offer world-class alternatives. You will develop opinions about brisket.

H-E-B Worship

H-E-B is a Texas-based grocery chain that Austinites regard with a level of devotion that outsiders find baffling until they experience it. H-E-B's combination of quality, price, Texas-specific products, and genuine community investment (especially during disasters) has earned it near-mythological status. Your nearest H-E-B will quickly become a landmark in your mental map of Austin.

Keep Austin Weird

The "Keep Austin Weird" ethos is still very much alive, even as the city grows rapidly. Austin embraces eccentricity, independent businesses, and a general irreverence toward corporate conformity. The Cathedral of Junk, Barton Springs, Sixth Street, the Domain, and the annual bat emergence from Congress Avenue Bridge are all genuinely Austin phenomena.

Welcome to Austin: Essential Resources for Newcomers

Austin has a strong infrastructure for welcoming new residents. These are the resources every Austin newcomer should bookmark:

Austin Chamber of Commerce

austinchamber.com, Business connections, economic data, newcomer events, and networking opportunities across the metro.

Austin Public Library

The Austin Central Library downtown (710 W César Chávez) is a genuinely stunning building and resource hub. Free library card for all Travis County residents, includes digital services, maker spaces, and community programs.

Austin FC

Austin's MLS soccer team plays at Q2 Stadium in North Austin. Austin FC has developed one of the most passionate fan bases in Major League Soccer in just a few years. Getting tickets and joining the Verde culture is a fast track to feeling like an Austinite.

City of Austin Services

austintexas.gov, One-stop for Austin utility setup (Austin Energy, Austin Water), permits, parks, and local government services.

Online Communities

r/Austin on Reddit is active and genuinely helpful for newcomer questions. Facebook groups "Austin Newcomers and Transplants" and "Austin, Texas Moms" are valuable resources. Nextdoor is excellent for hyperlocal neighborhood questions.

Austin Airport (AUS)

abia.org, Flight information, parking, and ground transportation for Austin-Bergstrom International Airport.

Frequently Asked Questions: Moving to Austin 2026

Families relocating to Austin typically choose Westlake Hills (top-rated Eanes ISD), Round Rock (excellent schools + suburban space), or Cedar Park (affordable family homes near major employers). Each offers strong school districts, safe streets, and easy access to major highways. Westlake commands a significant price premium for the school district alone, entry-level Westlake homes start around $1.2M. Round Rock and Cedar Park offer more value per dollar while maintaining excellent school quality.

A full-service interstate move to Austin typically runs $3,000–$15,000+ depending on origin, home size, and services. Moving from the Northeast or West Coast trends higher. Budget an additional $500–$2,000 for packing materials, tips, and incidentals. To reduce costs: book mid-week and mid-month, consider portable storage containers, and avoid moving in the summer peak season (June–August) if possible. Get at least three written quotes from licensed, AMSA-member movers.

Texas law gives new residents 90 days to obtain a Texas driver's license, register to vote, and register their vehicle. Delaying these steps can result in fines. Visit any Texas DPS office with proof of Texas address, Social Security card, and your out-of-state license. Book your DPS appointment online as soon as possible, popular Austin locations fill up weeks in advance. Filing for your Travis County homestead exemption should happen by April 30 of the year following your home purchase.

Austin summers are intense, expect 90+ days above 100°F between June and September. Northerners and West Coast transplants are often surprised by the humidity. Practical tips: tinted windows, a powerful AC system, a covered parking spot or garage, lightweight clothing, and planning outdoor activities before 10 AM or after 7 PM. Your body does acclimatize over 2–3 weeks of gradual heat exposure. Winter is mild (40–60°F most years) but ice storms are possible, Winter Storm Uri in 2021 was a once-in-a-generation event, but preparedness matters.

Tesla's Gigafactory Texas is located in Del Valle, just southeast of Austin–Bergstrom International Airport. The closest residential neighborhoods are Del Valle itself, Manor, Pflugerville, and southeast Austin. For employees who prefer more amenities, South Austin and Buda/Kyle offer reasonable commute times (20–35 minutes off-peak). Avoid neighborhoods north of the river if Tesla is your destination, the highway geometry makes for painful commutes.

Shivraj Grewal, luxury real estate agent Austin

Shivraj Grewal

CLHMS Guild · CNE · TREC #736060 · Compass RE Texas · (512) 617-0001
CLHMS Guild CNE Luxury Specialist Relocation Expert

Shivraj Grewal is Austin's luxury relocation specialist with 100+ transactions, $100M+ in volume, and 117 Google reviews at 5.0 stars. Specializing in Westlake, Tarrytown, Mueller, and all Austin luxury neighborhoods, Shivraj guides executives, tech workers, and high-net-worth buyers through every step of the Austin relocation process, from first neighborhood consultation to closing day.

Ready to Find Your Austin Home?

Shivraj Grewal has guided 100+ families through Austin relocations. Whether you're buying in Westlake, Mueller, Cedar Park, or Lake Travis, get a personalized neighborhood consultation at no cost.

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