West Austin luxury homes continue to hold their ground as one of the most resilient segments in the Austin real estate market. In early 2026, with inventory still measured in weeks rather than months in the $1.5M–$4M range, the market is moving selectively, but it is moving.
Whether you're considering a sale in Westlake Hills, exploring a purchase near Lost Creek, or simply keeping tabs on what your home is worth, here's a grounded look at where things stand and what it means for your next decision.
What the Data Says About West Austin Luxury Home Values
According to the Austin Board of Realtors[1], the median price in the 78746 ZIP code, which covers much of Westlake Hills and portions of the Barton Creek area, held near $1.87M[1] through Q4 2025, representing a 2.1% year-over-year increase despite broader softening in other Austin ZIP codes. That kind of stability is not random. West Austin's luxury segment is supported by consistent demand from relocating families, Eanes ISD enrollment, and a limited supply of buildable land.
Redfin data from early 2026 shows homes priced between $1.5M and $2.5M in 78746 and 78733 spending an average of 42 days on market[2], down from 61 days in mid-2024[2]. That shift matters for sellers who held off listing while the broader market recalibrated. The appetite is there; execution is what separates results.
Barton Creek, Rob Roy, Davenport Ranch, and the Lost Creek corridor are seeing the most consistent activity in the $2M–$3.5M range. Homes with updated kitchens, private pools, and hill country views are generating multiple offers when priced correctly from the start.
Selling West Austin Luxury Homes: What the Market Expects Now
If you've been thinking about selling in Westlake Hills, Spanish Oaks, or anywhere in the 78746 or 78733 ZIP codes, 2026 offers a more balanced environment than the past two years. That's actually an advantage for sellers who prepare.
Buyers are back at the table, but they're informed. They're comparing your home to three or four others within a short radius. Pricing strategy matters more than it did in 2021. A home listed at the right number sells. One that's chased with price reductions tends to stall.
At Grewal RE Group, we use a 3-phase marketing approach: Private Exclusive first (reaching motivated, qualified buyers before the listing goes public), then Coming Soon (building awareness and appointment demand before day one on-market), then Full Market Launch. This sequence consistently produces cleaner results than a cold MLS listing, particularly for homes in the $2M+ range.
Preparation also matters at this price point. A pre-listing inspection, strategic staging, and professional photography with aerial drone coverage are not optional in West Austin's luxury tier, they're expected. Buyers doing serious due diligence on a $2.5M home expect the home to present at that level from the first click.
What Buyers Looking at West Austin Luxury Homes Should Plan For
Buying in West Austin in 2026 means competing for well-priced inventory in a market that doesn't offer many second chances on the right property.
The Eanes ISD factor remains consistent and significant. Families relocating from California, New York, and Seattle routinely identify Westlake Hills and the Lost Creek area as their first-choice targets specifically because of the school district. That steady demand keeps values stable even when broader market conditions soften.
For buyers, a few things worth knowing before you start touring:
Know your priorities before you fall in love with a floor plan. The difference between a home on Bee Cave Road with a longer commute and one on a quiet Barton Hills street with a 15-minute drive to downtown matters a great deal after the first year. Get clear on schools, commute, lot size, and long-term goals before your search starts in earnest.
Understand the full cost of ownership. West Austin luxury homes carry property taxes that, while lower on an effective rate basis than many comparable California markets, still represent a material annual expense on a $2M home. At Grewal RE Group, we walk every buyer through a full cost-of-ownership comparison before any offer is made.
Work with someone who knows the streets. There's a meaningful difference between a home on one side of Lost Creek Boulevard and another a few blocks away in terms of school zone, lot grade, and resale profile. That kind of local detail is what separates a confident purchase from one you're second-guessing a year later.
Relocation Buyers: West Austin's Case for Long-Term Value
For buyers relocating to Austin from higher-cost markets, West Austin luxury homes offer something that's hard to find in most major metros: strong school districts, low crime, hill country topography, and access to downtown in under 20 minutes on most days.
The Davenport Ranch and Rob Roy areas in particular attract executives and professionals who want a quieter, more residential feel without sacrificing proximity to Austin's core. For families, proximity to Eanes ISD's elementary schools along the 78746 corridor is often the deciding factor. For investors, the long-term land value in the western hills, where new supply is genuinely constrained, supports a patient, long-horizon thesis.
Whether you're moving for work, family, or both, having a single point of contact who knows West Austin, Central Austin, and East Austin equally well means you're making your comparison with complete information, not just what's available in one neighborhood.
What's Your West Austin Home Worth Right Now?
If you own a home in 78746, 78733, 78735, or anywhere in the Westlake Hills, Barton Creek, or Rob Roy corridor, I'm happy to pull a current market analysis based on actual comparable sales in your specific area.
No pitch involved. Just the numbers so you can make an informed decision on your timeline, whether that's this spring, later this year, or simply staying informed.
Sources
- Austin Board of Realtors, Central Texas Housing Market Statistics (78746 median sold price Q4 2025, year-over-year trends)
- Redfin, 78746 Housing Market Data (days on market for $1.5M–$2.5M homes, early 2026)
