Moving to Austin from Houston: 2026 Relocation Guide
Houston vs Austin Real Estate: The Price Reality
The most immediate shock for Houston buyers entering the Austin market is the price gap. According to the Houston Association of Realtors (HAR), Houston's median home price in early 2026 sits near $320,000, a figure that reflects the city's abundant land supply and lower density zoning. The Austin Board of Realtors (ABoR) reports Austin's median at approximately $485,000, a 52% premium driven by land constraints, the Colorado River corridor, and sustained demand from tech employers.
Both cities carry similar property tax burdens. The Texas Comptroller data shows effective rates near 2.2% in the Houston metro and approximately 2.1% in the Austin metro. Neither city benefits from a state income tax advantage over the other, both are in Texas. The practical financial difference is therefore almost entirely in purchase price and appreciation trajectory. Austin homes have historically appreciated faster, but that premium also means higher entry cost and larger dollar-amount property tax bills even at a similar rate.
For Houston buyers with equity, many arrive with $80,000 to $150,000 from the sale of a Houston home, Austin becomes attainable, particularly at the $500,000–$750,000 price point where the market has softened meaningfully since its 2022 peak. Redfin Research tracks Austin as one of the few major Texas metros that experienced a post-pandemic price correction, creating a more accessible window than existed in 2021–2022.
Why Texans Are Moving from Houston to Austin
According to U.S. Census Bureau data, the Austin-Round Rock-Georgetown MSA added roughly 18% to its population between 2020 and 2025, one of the fastest growth rates among major U.S. metros. A significant share of that growth comes from intrastate migration from Houston, Dallas, and San Antonio. The drivers are consistent: tech employment, quality of life, and a desire for a more urban, walkable lifestyle that Houston's sprawl does not easily provide.
Austin's tech ecosystem has attracted global headquarters and major campus expansions. Apple's campus in North Austin employs thousands; Tesla's Gigafactory in Del Valle created a manufacturing anchor; Dell Technologies remains headquartered here; and an entire ecosystem of VC-backed startups has emerged around the University of Texas. The Bureau of Labor Statistics consistently ranks Austin among the top metros for tech-sector job growth.
For Houston-based energy professionals, the transition is increasingly common. As the energy industry has digitized, operational technology, clean energy finance, carbon markets, Austin's tech infrastructure has become a natural landing pad. Many find that their Houston industry experience is highly valued by Austin-based tech companies managing energy logistics and sustainability.
The outdoor lifestyle is a powerful draw. Barton Springs Pool, Lady Bird Lake, the Barton Creek Greenbelt, and dozens of hiking and mountain biking trails are within minutes of the urban core. Houston's flat terrain and flood-prone landscape make outdoor recreation more difficult; Austin's Hill Country geography creates a fundamentally different relationship between residents and the outdoors.
Best Austin Neighborhoods for Houston Transplants
East Austin (78702)
East Austin is Austin's most culturally dynamic neighborhood, a 2000s-era transformation from working-class Latino community to a globally-recognized food, bar, and creative scene. Median home prices run $550,000–$750,000 for standalone homes, with condos available at lower price points. Houston buyers accustomed to Montrose or Midtown feel immediately at home. Walkability scores are among Austin's highest, and the density of coffee shops, restaurants, and music venues per square mile rivals any U.S. neighborhood.
South Congress / Bouldin Creek (78704)
South Congress Avenue is Austin's most photographed street, a mile-long corridor of local boutiques, restaurants, and entertainment venues leading to downtown. Bouldin Creek, which surrounds it, is a quieter residential neighborhood with craftsman bungalows and live oaks. Home prices in 78704 range from $650,000 to well over $1.5M. Houston buyers seeking a neighborhood that feels genuinely urban and locally distinct frequently choose this area.
Mueller (78723)
Built on the former Robert Mueller Municipal Airport site, Mueller is Austin's premiere new urbanist development, walkable streets, a central retail town square, excellent schools, and diverse housing types from condos to custom homes. Prices range from $450,000 to $1M+. Houston buyers with children who want walkability and suburban function in the same ZIP code often settle on Mueller.
Round Rock / Cedar Park (suburban corridor)
Houston buyers seeking square footage, good school districts, and pricing closer to what they left behind frequently choose the Round Rock, Cedar Park, or Leander suburban corridor. Homes in the $400,000–$600,000 range offer 2,500–4,000 sq ft, closer to Houston norms. Round Rock ISD is among the most respected in Central Texas, and the area is well-served by major retail and highway access.
Westlake Hills / Barton Creek
For Houston buyers arriving with substantial equity, $300,000 or more from a River Oaks, Memorial, or West University home sale, Westlake Hills and Barton Creek offer Austin's equivalent luxury experience. Homes on wooded, hillside lots with canyon views range from $1.5M to $5M+. Eanes ISD, which serves Westlake, is consistently rated among Texas's best school districts.
Houston vs Austin Lifestyle: Key Differences
The lifestyle gap between Houston and Austin is real, and Houston transplants report it takes 6–12 months to fully adjust. Here are the most commonly cited differences:
- Car dependency vs. walkability. Houston is one of the least walkable major cities in the U.S. Austin, while still car-dependent in its suburbs, has a significantly more walkable urban core, particularly in 78704, 78702, and downtown. Many Austin transplants from Houston reduce their car usage within the first year.
- Food scene. Houston's food diversity, Vietnamese, Indian, Ethiopian, Thai, is unmatched in Texas and rivals any global city. Austin's food scene is excellent but narrower in international diversity. Austin compensates with outstanding farm-to-table, barbecue, and Mexican food, plus a nationally-recognized restaurant culture on South Congress and East 6th Street.
- Music and culture. Austin is the Live Music Capital of the World by proclamation and reputation. South by Southwest, Austin City Limits, and more live venues per capita than most U.S. cities make Austin's cultural calendar unmatched. Houston has a world-class museum district and performing arts scene that many transplants miss.
- Size and pace. Houston is the 4th-largest city in the U.S., with all the amenity diversity that entails. Austin's metro population (~2.4M) is roughly a third of Houston's. The smaller scale means shorter waits, tighter community networks, and easier access to nature, but also fewer major professional sports teams, less nightlife variety, and a smaller international airport.
- Weather. Both cities are hot. Austin is drier (34" vs 49" annual rainfall) and slightly less humid, which many find preferable. Houston's proximity to the Gulf makes summers feel heavier. Austin winters are marginally colder, with occasional ice storms that can be disruptive given the infrastructure, as demonstrated in February 2021.
Selling Your Houston Home and Buying in Austin
The most common logistical challenge in a Houston-to-Austin relocation is sequencing the sale and purchase to avoid carrying two mortgages or being caught without housing in Austin's fast-moving market. Here is a proven approach:
- Get pre-approved in Austin before listing in Houston. Understand your Austin budget based on net equity from your Houston sale. Many Austin sellers expect quick closes; being pre-approved signals seriousness and enables competitive offers.
- List your Houston home before submitting an Austin offer. A pending sale on your Houston property strengthens your offer profile in Austin, particularly for homes priced above $600,000 where seller financing contingencies matter.
- Consider bridge financing. If Austin market timing is critical, you've identified the right home and risk losing it, bridge loans allow you to purchase in Austin before your Houston sale closes. Your Compass agent can connect you with bridge lending resources through Compass Concierge-affiliated lenders.
- Build in a 45–60 day rent-back on your Houston home. Negotiating a rent-back period after your Houston home closes gives you time to find and close on your Austin property without rushing.
- Account for Texas closing costs. Both transactions will carry title insurance, survey, and escrow fees. Budget 2–3% of purchase price on the Austin buy side and 1–2% on the Houston sell side for agent-independent closing expenses.
According to NAR (National Association of Realtors), the average homeowner sells and repurchases within roughly 12 months when executing an intrastate relocation. Working with a single agent team that has visibility into both markets, or a referral network connecting Houston and Austin agents, meaningfully reduces timeline friction.
Houston-to-Austin is the most common intrastate relocation I see. Houston buyers often have significant equity — sometimes $80K–$120K from their home sale — and are pleasantly surprised that Austin's outdoor culture, walkable neighborhoods, and culinary scene justify the premium over Houston prices.
Practical Houston-to-Austin Moving Tips
Beyond the real estate transaction, a smooth Houston-to-Austin move requires logistical planning. Key considerations:
- Moving company timing. Book professional movers at least 8 weeks in advance. Houston-to-Austin is one of the most common moving routes in Texas, and reputable companies fill up quickly, especially in spring and summer. The ~2.5-hour drive means a single-day move is feasible for smaller households.
- Driver’s license and vehicle registration. Texas residents relocating within the state do not need new licenses, but if you're registering a vehicle previously in Houston (Harris County), Travis County registration fees and emissions testing requirements differ. Confirm your new address's county at the Texas Comptroller site for property tax district assignment.
- Homestead exemption. File for your Travis County homestead exemption immediately after closing. The deadline is April 30 for the tax year, and the exemption provides approximately $100,000 off your appraised value for school district taxes, a meaningful annual savings. You can file online through the Travis Central Appraisal District.
- Neighborhood exploration before you commit. Austin's neighborhoods vary dramatically by feel and price within short distances. Spending two to three weekends in Austin, staying in East Austin one weekend, South Austin the next, before deciding where to buy is time well spent. Many Houston buyers are surprised by how different the Hill Country suburbs feel compared to the urban core.
- School district research. If you have school-age children, Austin ISD, Eanes ISD, Round Rock ISD, and Lake Travis ISD all have distinct profiles. Research campuses, not just districts, individual school quality within AISD varies significantly by campus.
- Flood zone awareness. Austin has significant flood plain areas, particularly along creeks in East Austin and South Austin. Request FEMA flood zone maps from your agent for any property you're considering. Austin's limestone geology creates very fast drainage in storms, and some historically non-flood-zone properties were reclassified after the 2018 and 2023 flood events.
Frequently Asked Questions: Moving to Austin from Houston
Is Austin more expensive than Houston?
What do Houston transplants miss most about Houston?
Which Austin neighborhoods are popular with Houston relocators?
How far is Austin from Houston by car?
Is the job market better in Austin or Houston?
Sources & Further Reading
Ready to Make the Move from Houston to Austin?
Work with an Austin luxury real estate specialist who understands the Houston-to-Austin transition inside and out. 100+ transactions, $100M+ volume, 117 Google reviews at 5.0 stars.
Schedule a Consultation →