Austin, Texas · Cost of living

Austin cost of living,
2026.

Real numbers on rent, property tax, insurance, utilities, groceries, childcare, and the no-state-income-tax math by origin state. The ledger every relocation calculator omits, with the line items that actually decide the move.

Quick answer

What does it cost to live in Austin in 2026?

A two-adult household renting a two-bedroom in walkable Austin spends about $74,000 to $86,000 a year all-in. A family of four with one infant in daycare and a $700,000 mortgage spends about $148,000 to $168,000. A staff-engineer or staff-PM household with two kids spends about $215,000 to $240,000. The no-state-income-tax savings are real, smaller than the headlines, and largely returned through property tax and insurance if you buy.

Cheaper than San Francisco and New York by meaningful margins. More expensive than Nashville and Denver on housing-and-insurance, even after the Texas tax flip. Roughly equivalent to Seattle on rent.

The line items that decide the move are property tax (1.81 percent of value), homeowner insurance ($4,456 average), and the August cooling bill. Run your specific numbers →

Editor's note

Austin is cheaper than the Bay and NYC. It is not cheaper than Denver or Nashville. The eat-back is in the property tax line.

The headline pitch on Austin is the no-state-income-tax. The arithmetic is more specific, and the net varies enormously based on origin state, income, and whether you rent or buy. Texas balances the no-income-tax ledger with the eighth-highest effective property tax rate in the country. Travis County's effective rate runs 1.81 percent, against California's 0.71 percent and Denver's 0.51 percent. Texas homeowner insurance averages $4,456 a year per NAIC 2023 filings, the fourth-highest in the country. Those two line items get back roughly half of the income-tax savings on a comparable home.

The cheaper-than-California number is real and smaller than the brochure version. The cheaper-than-NYC number is larger than the brochure version, because NYC residents pay city income tax on top of state. The cheaper-than-Denver number does not exist. Denver and Nashville both undercut Austin on the all-in line, even before the income-tax savings. The threads on r/Austin from people who recently made the move are unusually consistent on this: the financial pitch is real for high earners moving from coastal markets, marginal for moderate earners, and negative for movers from already-no-tax states like Washington or Florida.

What follows is the audited ledger, broken out by line item, sourced to the Travis Central Appraisal District, the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, the Texas Department of Insurance, the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Energy Information Administration, the Texas Workforce Commission, Zumper, Zillow, and the recurring r/Austin threads where transplants are forced to be honest about it.

Nathaniel Peters, Founder & Editor
A residential street in Austin's Mueller neighborhood with sidewalks and front porches.

Mueller, the canonical Austin master-planned neighborhood. Median 4-bedroom around $842K, AISD with charter overflow, walkable to a grocery store and a farmers market. The kind of street that anchors the cost-of-living question for transplant families.

01 · The verdict in six lines

What the audited ledger looks like before the line items.

  • 01 No state income tax saves a California single filer about $9,977 at $150K and $23,927 at $300K. An NYC resident saves $14,121 at $150K and $29,654 at $300K, because NYC adds a city tax. Texas property tax plus insurance takes most of those savings back if you buy.
  • 02 The cheaper-than-SF number is real and smaller than the brochure version. The cheaper-than-NYC number is larger than the brochure version. The cheaper-than-Denver number does not exist.
  • 03 Rent in walkable Austin is $1,760 to $2,250 for a one-bed. Two-bed is $2,380 to $3,100. The specific neighborhood that keeps a reasonable commute trades at a premium that reflects exactly that scarcity.
  • 04 The biggest line item nobody budgets for is homeowners insurance. Texas averages $4,456 a year. That is 3.1x California and 3x New York. It rises every cycle.
  • 05 The August cooling bill is real. Expect $300 to $450 a month on electric for a 2,000 sq ft house in July and August. Every month outside summer runs $120 to $180.
  • 06 Childcare is the second surprise. Center-based infant care runs $1,800 to $2,400 a month. Daycare waitlists in Mueller and Hyde Park run 12 to 18 months.

What does Austin cost at different income levels?

02 · Cost by income

What Austin actually costs at four income bands.

The cost-of-living question is different at $80,000 than it is at $275,000. Both numbers are below. Both are real.

Cost by income

Four income bands, four versions of the same Austin.

The same set of fixed costs (property tax, insurance, utilities) applies across bands. What changes by band is the housing stock the income supports, and how meaningfully the no-state-income-tax flip reads on the ledger.

$80K single

Entry

Single filer · renter

Take-home
$64,200
Annual rent
$21,600

One-bed in East Austin or Crestview. One used car, full coverage. Groceries at H-E-B. The tax savings are real but small at this band, because federal and FICA dominate the ledger.

$120K single

Comfortable

Single filer · renter or first buyer

Take-home
$92,100
Annual rent
$27,600

One-bed in Hyde Park or Mueller, or a two-bed in Crestview. Entry-level house purchase is possible in the $400Ks in North Austin. The no-state-income-tax flip starts to read on the ledger here, roughly $7,000 a year against California.

$180K couple

Family

Married · first house plus daycare

Take-home
$147,900
Annual rent
$38,400

Two-bed walkable, or a 3/2 house purchase around $550K in Crestview, Mueller West, or Windsor Park. Childcare becomes the second rent. Property tax on a $550K house is $9,900 a year.

$275K couple

Senior

Married · staff-IC or PM household

Take-home
$214,500
Housing
Owner

Staff-engineer or staff-PM household buying a $750K to $900K house in Mueller, Tarrytown, or Westlake periphery. Tax flip against California is $15,000 to $19,000. Property tax plus insurance takes back $18,000 to $22,000.

Take-home is federal plus FICA only; Texas has no state income tax. Rent figures are 2026 Zumper median for the band-appropriate Austin submarket. Mortgage assumes 6.75 percent 30-year fixed, 20 percent down.

A street in Austin's East Austin neighborhood, with renovated bungalows and a mix of bar and restaurant signage.

East Austin (78702 / 78722). Median 3-bedroom house around $715K and a 1-bedroom rent of about $2,050. The neighborhood that anchors the median Austin cost-of-living conversation in 2026.

What is the cost of rent and homes by Austin neighborhood?

03 · Housing and rent

The rent and buy math, by neighborhood.

Austin rent is a two-number answer. There is inside-the-loop Austin (Mueller, Hyde Park, East Austin, South Congress, Crestview), and there is the rest. The difference between them on a two-bedroom apartment is $600 to $1,000 a month. The two maps do not overlap much; the people who want walkability are not the same people who want a 2,400 sq ft four-bed in Cedar Park, and the price reflects the small intersection.

Austin's 2020 to 2022 rent spike has mostly unwound. Metro rent peaked at roughly 28 percent above 2019 and is now about 12 percent above 2019. New multifamily supply around the Domain, East Riverside, and the Mueller fringe is the reason. Rent has been falling for eight consecutive months in the urban submarkets. It is not falling in the suburbs. A November 2025 r/Austin thread on luxury apartments bringing rent down (259 ups) corroborates the mainstream-press read: the Class A urban supply is doing the work.

On the buy side, the price-per-square-foot range across Austin is the largest of any Sun Belt city. Tarrytown trades at $525 a foot. Pflugerville trades at $210. The same square footage and finish costs roughly two-and-a-half times more on one side of the city than the other. The reason is school district access, not construction cost.

Housing data

Rent by neighborhood and bedroom, then home prices for the same neighborhoods.

Two tables, the same six-to-nine neighborhoods. Rent on top from Zumper January 2026. Median home prices on bottom from HAR MLS closed-sale data August 2025 to February 2026.

fig. 02 · monthly median rent by neighborhood and bedroom · Zumper Jan 2026
DowntownEast AustinMuellerHyde ParkCrestviewRound Rock
Studio$1,850$1,680$1,820$1,720$1,480$1,390
1 bed$2,250$2,050$2,180$1,980$1,760$1,620
2 bed$3,100$2,820$2,980$2,650$2,380$2,090
3 bed$4,400$3,650$3,850$3,350$3,050$2,680
Median 3-month trailing rent, Zumper metro dataset. Concessions excluded.
Buy-side by neighborhood

Median home price and what each Austin neighborhood actually buys you.

Tarrytown / Old West Austin

$525/sf

8 min to downtown · Eanes-adjacent

Median house
$1.9M
School zone
AISD

Pre-war bungalows and mid-century ranches. The most-expensive central neighborhood inside city limits, set against the $1.6M Eanes equivalent two miles west.

Mueller

$410/sf

12 min to downtown off-peak · AISD

Median house
$842K
Built
2007 to now

New-build planned community. AISD with charter overflow. The closest thing Austin has to Park Slope, designed-from-scratch street grid plus farmers market plus parks.

Hyde Park

$475/sf

UT-adjacent · AISD

Median house
$895K
Built
1920s to 1940s

Historic housing stock. Restored bungalows and teardowns. Mature live oak canopy. The premium pays for the canopy and the AISD elementary, not for square footage.

East Austin (Holly / Govalle)

$385/sf

East of I-35 · AISD

Median house
$715K
Stock
Mixed

Transitional. Bungalow renovation plays and new-build infill. The most-active gentrification zone inside the city; price per square foot has compressed in 2025.

South Congress / Bouldin

$495/sf

South of the river · AISD

Median house
$985K
Lot size
Small

Restaurant-dense and walkable. Small lots and tight inventory. The premium pays for the restaurant scene, not the square footage.

Crestview / Brentwood

$360/sf

North-central · AISD

Median house
$615K
Stock
Mid-century

Mid-century ranches. The cheapest central-Austin neighborhood with walkability and AISD access. Most middle-income family inventory inside city limits lands here.

West Lake Hills

$485/sf

12 min off-peak · Eanes ISD

Median house
$1.62M
School zone
Eanes

Hilly, green, no sidewalks. Eanes ISD is the reason for the price. The Westchester / Bay Area expat cohort concentrates here.

Round Rock / Cedar Park

$245/sf

35 to 50 min in peak · RRISD or Leander

Median house
$485K
Built
1990s to 2020s

Suburban. Round Rock ISD or Leander ISD. The price-per-square-foot drops sharply but so does access to inside-the-loop social density.

Pflugerville / Hutto

$210/sf

Northeast suburbs · PfISD or HutISD

Median house
$425K
Stock
New-build

Entry-level family purchase. The cheapest tier in the Austin metro that still has a school district worth being in. Commute pulls 50+ minutes during peak.

fig. 03 · closed-sale medians, HAR MLS data, August 2025 to February 2026.

A tree-canopied residential street in Austin's Hyde Park neighborhood with mature live oaks.

Hyde Park, the canopied historic-housing neighborhood. $475 per square foot, $895K median. The 1920s-to-1940s housing stock plus the AISD elementary plus the UT-adjacent walkability is what the buy-side premium pays for.

How much does property tax and insurance cost in Austin?

04 · Property tax and insurance

The line items that swallow most of the tax-flip savings.

Texas has no state income tax. The state balances that ledger with the eighth-highest effective property tax rate in the country. Travis Central Appraisal District filings put the Travis County effective rate at 1.81 percent on assessed value, against California's 0.71 percent and Denver's 0.51 percent. On a $700,000 house in Travis County, that is $12,670 a year. On a $1.2 million house in West Lake Hills, $21,720.

The Texas homestead exemption caps year-over-year assessed-value growth at 10 percent for primary residences. New buyers reset to market value at purchase. Existing owners enjoy a capped base. The difference between the two ledgers is large enough to matter for a decision about whether to move inside Austin. A July 2025 r/Austin thread on a proposed Travis County tax-rate increase (394 ups) drew clarification from u/RealtorSethATX (269 ups): "this only pertains to the county taxes, and will increase the tax bill for the median homesteaded property by about $100. It's not a 9.12% increase on your tax bill." The county portion is small; the AISD portion is the larger driver of total bill changes.

The second line item is homeowners insurance. Texas averages $4,456 a year per NAIC 2023 data, the fourth-highest state in the country. California averages $1,429. New York averages $1,476. Insurance has risen 41 percent over the last four cycles per Texas Department of Insurance rate filings. Three of the top twelve homeowners insurers stopped writing new policies in Central Texas during that window.

County breakdown

Property tax plus insurance, by Austin-area county.

Travis, Williamson, and Hays each have slightly different effective rates and slightly different insurance markets. The combined monthly carrying cost is a third to a half of mortgage P&I on a $700K house.

fig. 04 · property tax + insurance by Austin-area county · $700K house
CountyEffective rateAnnual property taxAvg insuranceCombined monthly
Travis (Austin proper)1.81%$12,670$4,200$1,406 / mo
Williamson (Round Rock, Cedar Park)1.95%$13,650$3,800$1,454 / mo
Hays (Kyle, Buda, Dripping Springs)1.91%$13,370$3,600$1,414 / mo
Rates from county appraisal districts 2024 certified rolls. Insurance from NAIC 2023 and TDI rate filings.
Aerial of Lake Austin and the Westlake homes that line its south bank.

Westlake on the south bank of Lake Austin. A $1.62M Eanes-zoned home pays roughly $29,300 a year in property tax alone, before insurance. The high-end Austin tax bill is where the no-state-income-tax math turns into something specific instead of an abstraction.

What is the no-state-income-tax savings, by origin state?

The tax flip, by origin state

The headline savings vary by origin. The eat-back does not.

Income-tax savings are largest from NYC, then California, then non-NYC New York. Property tax and insurance are the same regardless of where you came from. The net is what determines whether the move pencils.

Net annual savings, by origin

What Texas actually saves a single filer at $200,000, after the eat-back.

Same salary, same Austin home, three different origin-state ledgers. The Texas property tax and insurance line is fixed at +$11,107 per year on a $700K Austin home (vs an unbought California or NYC home plus rental coverage). The income-tax delta is what varies.

$200K single filer buying a $700K Austin home, by origin state
Origin state Old state-tax bill Texas income-tax saved TX property tax + insurance Net
NYC (state + city) $19,059 $19,059 -$11,107 +$7,952
California $14,627 $14,627 -$11,107 +$3,520
Massachusetts $10,000 $10,000 -$11,107 -$1,107
NY non-NYC (Long Island) $11,432 $11,432 -$11,107 +$325
Washington / Florida (no income tax) $0 $0 -$11,107 -$11,107

Income-tax delta computed from Tax Foundation 2024 brackets and NYC Department of Finance city brackets, single filer with standard state deduction. Texas property tax $700K x 1.81% = $12,670, less the $4,200 implied California or NY rental coverage = $8,470 net property tax. Plus $4,456 Texas average homeowner insurance, less $1,453 average California or NY renter insurance = $3,003 insurance delta. Combined eat-back = $11,107 a year. Net = income-tax saved minus eat-back. Computed by Landed.

Run your numbers

The cost of being you in Austin.

Federal tax, Texas state and local tax, housing, utilities, auto insurance, and sales tax. Compared against the state you are moving from. No average, no national median, your numbers.

Federal income tax$0
FICA payroll$0
Texas state & local$0
Take-home pay$0
Utilities electric, gas, water$0
Auto insurance state average, full coverage$0
Sales tax state + local average$0
Discretionary, after fixed costs$0
vs. moving from

Pick the state you are moving from to compare discretionary income after taxes, housing, utilities, auto insurance, and sales tax.

How much do utilities cost in Austin?

05 · Utilities and the August bill

Why everyone in Austin knows their July electric bill.

Austin summers run 100 degrees or hotter on roughly sixty days per year. Average July and August high is 97 to 101 degrees with humidity that does not drop meaningfully at night. A 2,000 square-foot single-family house with 1990s-era insulation and a 16-SEER central unit, set to 74 degrees, will pull 1,800 to 2,400 kWh per month in July. That is $360 on an Austin Energy residential tier-3 plan for those two months.

From November through April the same house runs $150 to $190 a month. Annual electric weighted for summer is roughly $2,200 to $2,600. Gas is cheap: most Central Texas homes use gas only for water heating and backup furnace, averaging $55 a month. Water and sewer in Austin proper run $70 a month; higher with summer irrigation.

The grid is also a real consideration. February 2021's Uri event put 70 percent of the state in rolling blackouts. The grid has been hardened, interconnections added, weatherization mandated. But Austin Energy urges voluntary conservation on most summer afternoons. It is a civic conversation, not a theoretical one.

fig. 05 · monthly utilities, 2,000 sq ft Austin single-family
Line itemJul-Aug peakNov-Apr off-peakNotes
Electric$360$150Austin Energy tiered residential
Gas$55$70Water heat + backup furnace
Water / sewer$105$70Summer includes irrigation
Internet (gigabit)$85$85Google Fiber or AT&T
Source: Austin Energy residential tariff, City of Austin water/sewer schedule, EIA state-average gas.

How much do groceries cost in Austin?

06 · Groceries and sales tax

H-E-B is cheap. Staples are exempt. Prepared food, alcohol, and candy are taxed.

Austin groceries run roughly 10 to 14 percent below the California equivalent, primarily because H-E-B prices its store-brand and produce lines below the Safeway and Whole Foods benchmarks. A family of four on the USDA Low-Cost Food Plan spends about $1,240 a month on groceries in Austin, against $1,390 to $1,475 in the Bay Area and $1,320 in Seattle. A two-adult household spends about $720 a month.

Grocery staples are exempt from sales tax in Texas under Tax Code 151.314. Bread, milk, eggs, produce, raw meat, dairy, flour, sugar, cereal, and canned goods carry no state or local sales tax. What Texas does tax at the full 8.20 percent combined rate is prepared food, alcohol, candy, soft drinks, bottled flavored water, pet food, paper goods, and cleaning supplies. The sales-tax delta against California or New York is in the low hundreds per year per household, not the thousands.

Alcohol is sold at dedicated stores (Spec's, Total Wine) at shelf prices roughly 15 to 22 percent below California and New York equivalents, because Texas alcohol distribution is a three-tier system that delivers volume pricing to the consumer.

How much do cars and transportation cost in Austin?

07 · Transportation

Two cars is the base case. The exceptions are few and specific.

The average Austin household owns 1.8 vehicles per Census ACS 2023. For households who work in or near downtown and live in Mueller, Clarksville, Travis Heights, or Hyde Park, one car plus a bike is viable. For everyone else, two cars is structural. The neighborhoods that enable a one-car household are priced accordingly.

Auto insurance in Texas averages $2,228 per year for full coverage per Insurance Information Institute 2024. Austin-specific averages run about ten percent above the state. A household with two vehicles budgets $3,800 to $4,800 a year on insurance alone. Add roughly $190 a month in gasoline at AAA Austin average, and $95 a month if the primary commute uses 183A, MoPac express, or 130 via TxTag.

CapMetro bus and rail are not a realistic primary commute option in most of Austin. Red Line commuter rail runs Leander to downtown on a limited schedule. Bus frequency is 15-30 minutes on most trunk routes, 45-plus minutes in the suburbs. CapMetro monthly passes are $41.25.

How much does childcare cost in Austin?

08 · Childcare and school

The second rent.

Infant center-based care in Austin runs $1,800 to $2,400 a month. Preschool (ages 3 to 5) runs $1,400 to $1,950 a month. Nannies command $22 to $28 an hour. A household with one infant and one preschooler in center-based care spends $3,400 to $4,200 a month, which for a dual-income $250,000 household is roughly 22 percent of take-home.

Waitlists are the second problem. Mueller-area centers and Hyde Park centers run 14 months on average for an infant slot, with some centers quoting 18 months. The practical consequence: if you are moving to Austin with a plan to have a baby, get on a daycare waitlist the month you close on the house, not the month the baby is born.

Public school in Texas starts with free pre-K at age 4 in AISD and most suburban districts. Kindergarten through 12 is tuition-free in the public districts. The Austin school decision is less about tuition and more about district zone. Eanes ISD, Lake Travis ISD, Round Rock ISD, and Leander ISD carry a $150,000 to $400,000 housing premium over AISD zones. See the family version of this guide for the full school-district premium analysis.

South Congress Avenue in Austin with the I Love You So Much mural and pedestrians.

South Congress, the part of Austin that does the visual work the listicles ask of it. The discretionary-spending line item lives here, and is the variable that matters most for whether a household budget feels tight or comfortable.

How does Austin compare to other cities on cost of living?

09 · Austin vs other cities

The five comparisons that actually come up.

Austin is cheaper than San Francisco, cheaper than New York, and more expensive than Nashville and Denver. It is roughly equivalent to Seattle on rent, more expensive on insurance, and tied on state income tax (Seattle has the same zero state income tax). The Austin move is a rational one from SF and NYC and a more complicated one from Denver or Nashville.

City comparison

Austin against five comparable metros, on the headline cost lines.

Six cities, seven cost lines per city. Austin is cheaper than San Francisco and New York, more expensive than Nashville and Denver, and roughly comparable to Seattle on rent (with higher insurance).

Austin, TX

Reference

No state income tax · high property tax

1-bed rent
$2,180
2-bed rent
$2,980
Median home
$842K
Property tax
1.81%
Insurance
$4,456
State income tax
None
Sales tax
8.20%

San Francisco, CA

Most expensive

High income tax · low property tax

1-bed rent
$3,550
2-bed rent
$4,800
Median home
$1.4M
Property tax
0.71%
Insurance
$1,429
State income tax
9.30%
Sales tax
8.75%

New York, NY

Highest rent

State + city income tax · high property tax

1-bed rent
$4,100
2-bed rent
$5,600
Median home
$780K
Property tax
1.73%
Insurance
$1,476
State income tax
6.85%
Sales tax
8.88%

Seattle, WA

No income tax

No state income tax · low insurance

1-bed rent
$2,450
2-bed rent
$3,280
Median home
$895K
Property tax
0.76%
Insurance
$1,188
State income tax
None
Sales tax
10.10%

Denver, CO

Cheapest property tax

Low property tax · flat 4.40% state

1-bed rent
$1,960
2-bed rent
$2,580
Median home
$595K
Property tax
0.51%
Insurance
$3,146
State income tax
4.40%
Sales tax
7.81%

Nashville, TN

Cheapest overall

No state income tax · low home prices

1-bed rent
$1,780
2-bed rent
$2,350
Median home
$485K
Property tax
0.66%
Insurance
$1,828
State income tax
None
Sales tax
9.55%

fig. 06 · Sources: Zumper Jan 2026, Zillow Feb 2026, Tax Foundation 2025, NAIC 2023, local sales-tax ordinances. For the longer paired comparisons with full narrative, see the city-vs-Austin pages: Austin vs San Francisco · Austin vs Seattle · Austin vs Denver · Austin vs Nashville · Austin vs Chicago · Austin vs Miami · Austin vs Atlanta · Austin vs Phoenix.

What do residents actually say about Austin's cost of living?

What residents actually say

The threads from people who recently made the move are unusually consistent.

No composite voices. No "interview with a transplant who happens to mirror your scenario." Real Reddit threads, real usernames, real upvote counts.

The single most-cited Austin cost-of-living thread of late 2025 was "Is it just me or does Austin make you feel broke even when you're earning decent?" from October 2025 (1,015 ups). The answer, in the most-upvoted reply (1,414 ups) from u/Consistent-Star7568, was a single line: "What you just described is being an adult in pretty much any city." The follow-up that got 502 ups, from u/Busy_Struggle_6468: "Alcohol and dining out will bankrupt you in this town no matter how much you earn. Once I learned to enjoy home life and treat the bar and restaurant outings like a rare treat, my bank account thanked me."

The discretionary line is the actual variable, in other words. The fixed costs (rent, property tax, insurance, utilities, childcare) are what they are; the household-level difference between feeling broke and feeling okay in Austin is whether the dining-out and bar tab is contained.

The second recurring thread is "Is the average Austinite doing ok?" from September 2025 (566 ups). The most-upvoted reply (826 ups), from u/Adventurous-Motor889: "It's the random bs that kills us. $832 because we had to go to the ER as my son had a bad croup attack at 2am. $500 deductible on a windshield replacement from a chip I missed at the time and could have been filled for free." The variance line, not the median line, is what most household budgets actually fail at.

The third thread, also from late 2025, is u/gregaustex's reply (301 ups): "I'm trying to figure out if the cost of living is an Austin thing or a national thing. Based on recent travels I'm thinking it's at least 50% an Austin thing. Our prices for a lot of things seem to rival HCOL cities like Boston and NYC." That is the local read on whether Austin's cost spike is structural or comparable. The honest answer in the data: it is mostly structural, mostly insurance and property tax, and mostly post-2021. Austin in 2026 prices like a low-tier high-cost-of-living metro, not a Sun Belt cheap city.

The rental-side thread that captures the mid-cycle frustration is "Why does renting in Austin feel like applying for a mortgage?" (342 ups, September 2025). u/Smokenstein's reply (297 ups): "What's annoying is the $50-$200 application fee PER RESIDENT. (Not to mention you have to fill out an entirely different application, with extra fees, for each of your animals) Then they come back to you after a week and tell you that you didn't get it. Fee unrefundable." The application-fee line item is small individually and meaningful in aggregate for a transplant who applies to four or five places before signing.

The honest local read is in those threads. Austin is cheaper than the Bay or NYC and more expensive than the brochures imply. The dining-out budget is what most transplants underestimate. The variance budget (medical, repair, replacement deductibles) is what most transplants underbudget. The fixed-cost ledger is in the tables above. The variable-cost reality is in the threads.

Alcohol and dining out will bankrupt you in this town no matter how much you earn. Once I learned to enjoy home life and treat the bar and restaurant outings like a rare treat, my bank account thanked me.

Public threads.
Primary data.
Named editor.

That’s Landed.

Frequently asked

Questions on Austin cost of living.

Is Austin actually cheaper than San Francisco?

Yes, by about $30,000 to $55,000 a year for a $200K-plus household, and by less than people expect for a $120K single.

Housing is the biggest line. A Mueller three-bed at $842,000 is a Noe Valley one-bed at $1.4M. But Austin adds property tax at 1.81 percent and homeowners insurance at about $4,456 a year; San Francisco runs 0.71 percent property tax and $1,429 insurance. The state income tax savings are real but half of them come back through property tax plus insurance.

Is Austin more expensive than Nashville or Denver?

Versus Nashville, yes, and by about $9,000 to $14,000 a year on housing and insurance.

Nashville median home is roughly $485K to Austin's $842K for comparable urban neighborhoods. Versus Denver, it is closer to a wash on housing, with Austin meaningfully more expensive on property tax and insurance. Denver's property tax rate is 0.51 percent, less than a third of Travis County's 1.81 percent.

What is the real no-state-income-tax savings in Austin?

It depends on origin state and income.

A California single filer at $150K saves about $9,977. At $200K, $14,627. At $300K, $23,927. An NYC resident at $200K saves about $19,059 (state plus city). A Washington or Florida household saves zero, because they already had no state income tax. The savings are real and smaller than most calculators show, because they do not net out property tax and insurance if you buy.

How much is homeowners insurance in Austin?

Statewide Texas averages $4,456 a year per NAIC 2023, the fourth-highest in the country.

Austin specifically runs $3,200 to $6,500 depending on house age, roof material, and proximity to hail-prone zones west of MoPac. Insurance has risen 35 to 55 percent over the last three rate cycles in Central Texas.

What does a $700K house actually cost per month in Austin?

All-in monthly is about $5,090 to $5,200 for a $700K Travis County house.

Principal and interest at 6.75 percent on a 20 percent down 30-year fixed is about $3,640. Property tax at Travis County effective 1.81 percent is $1,055 a month. Insurance at $4,200 a year is $350 a month. HOA, if any, is typically $40 to $120 a month.

How much does a family of four need to live comfortably in Austin?

$168,000 to $182,000 for a Crestview, Mueller entry, Pflugerville, or Cedar Park house.

For a house in a top-tier school zone like Eanes ISD or Lake Travis ISD, the number moves to $245,000 plus. For walkable urban Austin (Clarksville, Tarrytown, Zilker), it is $300,000 plus.

Do Austin groceries cost less than California groceries?

About 10 to 14 percent less at H-E-B than at Safeway or Whole Foods in California.

The bigger delta is wine and liquor at 15 to 22 percent below California equivalents. Texas exempts grocery staples from sales tax under Tax Code 151.314. Prepared food, alcohol, candy, soft drinks, pet food, paper goods, and cleaning supplies are taxed at the full 8.25 percent combined rate.

What is Austin childcare cost in 2026?

Infant center-based care runs $1,800 to $2,400 a month.

Preschool (ages 3 to 5) runs $1,400 to $1,950. Nannies command $22 to $28 an hour. Public pre-K starts at age 4 in AISD and is free. Waitlists at Mueller and Hyde Park centers run 12 to 18 months.

Is the August electric bill really that bad?

$280 to $420 a month for a 2,000 sq ft house in July and August on a standard plan at 74 to 76 degrees.

At 70 degrees it is $450 to $550. The cooling cost is real, is not going down, and is the reason Austin grid legislation is a local civic issue.

What is the cheapest neighborhood in Austin that is still in Austin?

Crestview, Brentwood, North Loop, and parts of Windsor Park.

These are the cheapest neighborhoods inside Austin proper that still have walkability and AISD access. Median three-bed house is $580K to $680K. Pflugerville, Hutto, and Manor drop the entry to $385K to $445K with a thirty-to-fifty-minute commute.

Closing

The Austin ledger, in three lines.

The fixed costs are real and largely non-negotiable. Travis County property tax is 1.81 percent of value. Homeowner insurance is roughly $4,200 a year on a typical Austin home. The August electric bill is $300 to $450 a month. None of those will compress meaningfully in the next cycle.

The income-tax savings are real for movers from California, NYC, and Massachusetts; meaningful for non-NYC New Yorkers and Illinoisans; small for movers from Washington, Florida, Tennessee, or Nevada (because those states already have no state income tax). The eat-back is the same for everyone: roughly $11,000 a year on a $700K Austin home. The net is largest for NYC residents at $200K-plus household, smallest or negative for Washington and Florida residents.

The variable costs are where most household budgets actually fail. Dining out, drinks, replacement deductibles, ER visits, the windshield chip you do not fix when it is $0. Read the full Austin guide for the rest of the picture, run the cost calculator against your specific salary and home price, and check the relevant version of the relocation guide: moving in your 20s, moving with kids, moving from California, or moving from New York.

Nathaniel Peters, Founder & Editor