City matchup · 2026

Austin vs Atlanta

Two Southern growth capitals with very different cultures underneath. Atlanta is older, Blacker, more corporate, more sprawling, and cheaper. Austin is younger, whiter, more tech, less sprawling, and hotter. The real comparison is which culture you want to join.

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Numbers in this comparison are sourced to Zumper, Zillow, NAIC, the Tax Foundation, and the IRS Statistics of Income file.

Updated Apr 19, 2026 Reviewed
fig. 01 · Austin vs Atlanta · headline cost lines, 2026
Metric Austin Atlanta Source / note
Median home price $548,000 $392,000 Zillow Home Value Index, March 2026 pulls.
Median rent, 2-bedroom $1,895 $1,755 Zumper 2026 Q1 market reports.
State income tax, top rate 0% 5.39% Texas has no state income tax. Compare against the origin state top marginal rate.
Effective property tax 1.80% 0.83% Property tax often flips the savings story. Texas collects more of its revenue through the house.
Combined sales tax 8.25% 7.38% State plus local combined. Applies to taxable goods and most services.
Homeowners insurance, annual $4,456 $2,105 NAIC 2024 state averages. Texas reflects hail and hurricane reinsurance pricing.
Auto insurance, annual $2,228 $1,970 NAIC 2024 full-coverage averages.
Avg summer high 96°F 88°F NOAA 1991-2020 climate normals.
Avg winter low 42°F 33°F NOAA 1991-2020 climate normals.
Annual sun days (>70% sun) 228 217 NWS and NOAA sunshine records.
Annual precipitation 34.3 in 49.7 in NOAA 1991-2020 normals, includes rain and snow melt.
Walk score (city center) 42 49 Walk Score April 2026 pulls for central neighborhoods.
Transit quality Limited Moderate Qualitative assessment of commute rail, light rail, and bus coverage.
Population (city proper) 979,000 499,000 Census 2023 estimates.
The verdict

Atlanta is cheaper on the house and stronger on Black professional and cultural infrastructure. Austin is stronger on tax and tech. The decision comes down to which version of the South you want to build your life in.

Pick Austin if
  • 01 Zero state income tax matters more than $150,000 less on the house
  • 02 You work in tech and want FAANG-satellite depth Atlanta does not offer
  • 03 You cannot handle an hour-plus commute through the Atlanta interstate system
  • 04 You want a younger, more transient city with fewer family roots to compete with
  • 05 You prefer a flatter, smaller, more bikeable street grid
Pick Atlanta if
  • 01 You want to live in the Black cultural and economic capital of the United States
  • 02 You work in film, logistics (Delta, UPS, Home Depot), or healthcare (CDC)
  • 03 You want an HBCU and the Morehouse-Spelman-Clark Atlanta ecosystem in your city
  • 04 You can tolerate I-285 traffic in exchange for $150,000 less on a house
  • 05 You prefer the older, more rooted Southern urban culture
01 · The real cost delta

What the cost-of-living calculators miss

Most tools flatten the Austin versus Atlanta comparison into a single percentage. That number hides almost everything that actually matters.

Atlanta is meaningfully cheaper than Austin on most axes except state income tax. Median home price runs $392,000 in Atlanta versus $548,000 in Austin, a $156,000 delta.

Georgia has a 5.39% flat state income tax as of 2026. Texas has zero. On a $200,000 single earner, that works out to roughly $10,800 a year more in Atlanta. Over a decade, that is $108,000 dollar-for-dollar, which erases most of the home-price advantage.

Property tax effective is similar: Atlanta 0.83%, Austin 1.80%. The Austin bill in absolute dollars ($9,900 on a $550K home) runs well above the Atlanta bill ($3,250 on a $390K home), which is the Atlanta advantage.

Insurance splits: Atlanta homeowners runs $2,105, Austin $4,456. Atlanta auto runs $1,970, Austin $2,228. Both are close enough that they do not change the verdict.

The bottom line on a $200,000 single earner: Atlanta and Austin come out within $3,000 a year of each other in total cost. Atlanta wins on purchase price, Austin wins on ongoing tax, and the wash is closer than most people expect.

02 · Housing

What 548000 gets you in each city

The house you can afford in each city is the lead story for most movers. The square footage, the lot size, and the housing stock itself are all different.

Atlanta housing stock is a mix of intown historic neighborhoods (Inman Park, Virginia-Highland, Grant Park) and postwar suburbs radiating out to the Perimeter and beyond. The city sits on rolling hills with dense tree cover, which is the single most beautiful thing about it.

$390,000 in intown Atlanta buys a 2-bedroom 1,400 square-foot bungalow or condo. The same money in Austin buys nothing inside the city.

Rent 2-bedrooms run $1,755 in Atlanta, $1,895 in Austin. The rental markets have tracked similarly through the last two cycles.

The Atlanta suburbs sprawl further than the Austin suburbs. A full commute from the outer counties can run 90 minutes each way in traffic. The Austin equivalent tops out around 60.

03 · Jobs and income

The career physics of each city

The job markets in the two cities are not interchangeable. Which industries cluster where ends up mattering more than any tax or housing delta.

Atlanta is Delta, UPS, Home Depot, Coca-Cola, the CDC, Cox Communications, and a deep Fortune 500 bench. The tech scene is real but thinner than Austin: Salesforce, Mailchimp (Intuit), Cisco, NCR, and a growing fintech cluster.

Austin is FAANG satellites, chip design, and enterprise software.

Senior tech salaries run 5% to 10% higher in Austin than Atlanta at equivalent roles. Senior logistics, consulting, and healthcare salaries run competitive to slightly higher in Atlanta.

Atlanta is the single largest film production market outside Los Angeles (thanks to the Georgia tax credit). If you are in film, TV, or post-production, Atlanta has no meaningful Austin equivalent.

04 · Weather and the shape of the year

The trade in how the year feels

Most comparison pieces reduce climate to two numbers. The lived experience is the shape of the year across all twelve months.

The two cities' weather is more similar than anyone expects. Atlanta summers average 88 degrees; Austin summers average 96. Atlanta winters average 33 degrees; Austin winters average 42.

Atlanta gets 49.7 inches of rain a year; Austin gets 34.3. Atlanta gets about 2 inches of snow; Austin gets 0.6. Atlanta gets regular ice storms in January and February that can shut the city down for two or three days at a time.

The pollen in Atlanta in March and April is in its own category. The city sits on a pine and oak forest and the spring yellow film on every car is a running joke that is also a respiratory challenge.

Austin summer is hotter and longer. Atlanta summer is shorter and more humid but wetter from afternoon thunderstorms.

05 · Culture and civic texture

What each city is actually like to live in

Beyond the numbers, the harder question is whether the daily texture of the place fits you.

Atlanta is the largest majority-Black US metro and the cultural capital of Black America. Music (Outkast, Gucci Mane, Migos, 21 Savage all came out of the city), film, fashion, higher education (Morehouse, Spelman, Clark Atlanta, Emory), civil rights history, and a professional-class infrastructure you cannot find in most US cities.

Austin is 7% Black. Atlanta proper is 49% Black. The metros produce meaningfully different cultural experiences and the choice between them is not culture-neutral.

Both cities are blue dots in swing-to-red states. Atlanta operates inside a state that flipped blue in 2020 and remains close; Austin operates inside a state that has moved right at the legislative level.

Atlanta is more corporate. Austin is more startup. Both have deep food and music cultures, and both have real hip-hop scenes.

06 · Getting around

The car-required city and the slightly-less-car-required city

Daily transportation shapes more of your life than a cost spreadsheet can capture.

Atlanta has MARTA, a subway-style rail system that covers the core but does not reach most of the metro. It is better than Austin's CapMetro but worse than Chicago or Seattle transit.

I-285 around the Atlanta perimeter is one of the most congested ring roads in America. I-35 through Austin is worse at peak but the Austin metro is smaller, so absolute commute times sometimes run shorter in Austin.

Both cities are car-required for most residents. Both produce two-car households by default.

Frequently asked

Common questions about this comparison.

Is Austin cheaper than Atlanta?

No, Atlanta is cheaper on most metrics except state income tax.

Atlanta median homes run $392,000 versus Austin $548,000. Atlanta property tax, homeowners insurance, and sales tax are all lower. The one Austin advantage is state income tax: Texas has zero, Georgia has 5.39%, which on a $200,000 earner is about $10,800 a year. The two cities end up within a few thousand dollars of each other on total cost.

Which city has a better Black community?

Atlanta, by a wide margin and not close.

Atlanta is the largest majority-Black US metro and the historic and cultural capital of Black America. Austin is 7% Black at the city level, compared to Atlanta at 49%. For Black professionals and families specifically, Atlanta has infrastructure Austin does not approach.

Which city has a better tech job market?

Austin, modestly. Austin has deeper FAANG presence and chip-design depth. Atlanta has Salesforce, Mailchimp, Cisco, and a growing fintech cluster, but the tech bench is smaller than Austin. Senior software compensation runs 5% to 10% higher in Austin.

Is Atlanta hotter than Austin?

No, Austin is hotter. Austin summer averages 96 degrees versus Atlanta 88. Austin has 110 days above 90; Atlanta has about 45. Atlanta summers are more humid and wetter; Austin summers are drier and longer.

Does Atlanta have a state income tax?

Yes. Georgia has a flat state income tax that lands at 5.39% in 2026, down from earlier brackets. Texas has no state income tax at all.

Which city has worse traffic?

Both are bad in different ways. Atlanta has I-285 ring-road congestion and longer absolute suburb-to-downtown commutes. Austin has I-35 bisecting the core city and worse peak-hour delays for shorter distances. Neither has a walkable solution at scale.