Austin, Texas · for young professionals

Moving to Austin
in your 20s.

The best Austin neighborhoods for young professionals, with the actual no-state-income-tax math at $65,000, the rent floor in the dense corridor, and what r/Austin says about the move.

Quick answer

Should you move to Austin in your 20s?

Yes if you have a confirmed job offer paying about $60,000 or more, you can afford rent in the dense corridor (East Austin, Hyde Park, North Loop, South Lamar, or Mueller), and you are willing to commit to one structured repeating activity by month six.

No if you do not yet have an offer and you are moving to find work in tech. The Austin tech market cooled in 2023 and has not fully recovered.

The Texas no-state-income-tax savings on a $65,000 salary are about $2,700 a year, not the $19,000 the headlines about high earners imply. Run your specific numbers → Moving with kids? See the family version of this guide.

Editor's note

The Austin tax pitch is real for high earners. At entry level it is real and small.

The headline pitch on moving to Austin is the no-state-income-tax math. For a transplant on a $300,000 salary, the math frees about $19,000 a year. That number gets quoted in every relocation article and most YouTube videos. It is the central reason a lot of senior tech workers moved here between 2018 and 2022.

For a 25-year-old on a $65,000 salary, the math frees about $2,700 a year. That is real money, but it is closer to one nice trip than to a life-changing windfall. The math is non-linear: it grows with income, doubles by $120,000, and reaches the $19,000 figure only above $300,000. Almost no one moving to Austin in their 20s is at that bracket on day one.

So the question is not whether the no-income-tax pitch is true. It is true, per Tax Foundation 2024 brackets. The question is whether the rest of the move adds up at the salary you actually have. This guide answers that with the data, the threads on r/Austin and r/AskAustin, and a named apartment locator's pricing math.

Nathaniel Peters, Founder & Editor
Landed analysis

What Texas actually saves you, by salary.

Computed against the standard single-filer state income tax in California, New York, and Massachusetts using Tax Foundation 2024 brackets. Average of the three origins shown.

Annual state income tax savings for a Texas-resident single filer at six salary tiers, against the average of California, New York, and Massachusetts. The savings curve is non-linear: small at entry-level, large above $200,000. Source: Tax Foundation 2024 state brackets, computed by Landed for a single filer with the standard state deduction.
$50,000 salary $1,890 saved per year $65,000 salary $2,740 saved per year $85,000 salary $4,010 saved per year $120,000 salary $6,370 saved per year $200,000 salary $11,790 saved per year $300,000 salary $18,770 saved per year

At $65,000, the savings work out to about $228 a month. That is the price of a single shared dinner on East 6th, or roughly the difference between rent in a central neighborhood and rent one ZIP code further out. It is not the difference between affording Austin and not.

The savings double by $120,000 and roughly triple by $200,000. Most career trajectories in Austin's tech market reach those tiers in three to five years, which is when the no-income-tax math starts to actually compound. The early-career mover is not getting the central financial benefit of Texas. The mid-career mover is.

A cyclist on a wide East Austin street with single-story bungalows and a clear sky.

East Austin, one of the four neighborhoods that make up the dense corridor. The fifteen-minute bike ride from anywhere in the corridor is the actual reason the move works socially.

Where should young professionals live in Austin?

Where to actually live

The dense corridor, and everywhere else.

In an August 2025 r/AskAustin thread, a 25-year-old asked the question every transplant asks. The replies clustered tightly. Twenty years of professional advice agrees with them.

The best Austin neighborhoods for young professionals in 2026 are the four that make up the dense corridor: East Austin (ZIP 78702 and 78722), Hyde Park / North Loop (78751, 78705), South Lamar / Bouldin / Travis Heights (78704), and Mueller (78723). It is a roughly two-and-a-half-mile band where you can walk to a coffee shop, a grocery store, and at least three bars, and where almost every social activity worth doing is within a fifteen-minute bike ride.

Outside the corridor, the city stops working the way the listicles describe. The far suburbs require a car for almost everything, the commute back into the city is the single most-cited regret in r/Austin threads, and the social density that makes Austin feel like a real place evaporates. That is not a value judgment. It is a function of the city's geography.

In an August 2025 r/AskAustin thread from a 25-year-old asking where to live, the replies converged on three things:

  • u/Lurkyloolou, on Zilker (the southwestern edge of the corridor): "Right across river from DT but by the park and great restaurants. Lots of young people your age. I would rent in a complex with a gym and pool. Look up S Lamar apartment rentals."
  • u/Maximum-Ad-7476, on East Austin: "5th, 6th, 7th streets near 35. You have Target, Whole Foods, Hopdoddys and several eating establishments and bars. Friendly people. Safe. So much to do without driving."
  • u/longhorn_2017, with a specific warning: "Just a heads up to avoid complexes in West Campus which is a student housing neighborhood."

Ross Quade, a licensed Austin apartment locator with twenty years in the market, gave the same answer in his February 2026 guide for young professionals: "If you make $65K-$85K and want walkability: Mueller, East Austin (closer in), North Loop / Hyde Park area, South Lamar corridor."

The Reddit thread and the twenty-year professional independently produced the same map. That is the part of Austin worth moving to in your 20s.

South Congress Avenue in front of Allen's Boots, an Austin landmark, on a clear afternoon.

South Congress, one of the four neighborhoods Quade and the r/Austin replies converge on for young professionals. The dense corridor is the part of Austin worth moving to in your 20s.

What salary do you need to live alone in Austin?

What it actually costs

Rent floor, fee math, and the salary you actually need.

The threads from people who recently made the move are unusually consistent on the numbers. The fees are not.

Median gross rent in Austin city was $1,655 in the 2023 American Community Survey. In central neighborhoods (78702, 78704, 78705, 78751) the actual floor for a one-bedroom in 2025-2026 is closer to $1,500 to $1,700. Studios and shared units run lower; a 700-square-foot one-bedroom in Mueller or Hyde Park runs $1,600 to $1,900.

What the listing prices do not include is what Quade flags directly in his guide: "A $1,500 apartment with valet trash ($35), pest control ($8), and a dog ($35) is actually $1,578/month. Over a 12-month lease, that's an extra $936 you didn't budget for." That math is not unusual. Most central-Austin apartment complexes run $50 to $100 a month in mandatory fees on top of the rent.

An April 2026 r/AskAustin thread from a 26-year-old relocating from NYC to a job at Apple asked what salary made sense to live alone. The most-upvoted replies came from people who had recently made similar moves:

  • u/Pressingt0uch: "$52K is what I made my first year here and lived alone paying $1,100. I was not super 'comfortable' till I was making $60K."
  • u/destrokhan: "$80K seems decent for being able to afford an apartment while being able to put money away and saving."
  • u/Little-Dependent2608, comparing the two cities directly: "I went from paying $3K/month for an 800 sq ft 1 bedroom apt in Brooklyn to $1,600/mo 1700 sq ft 3 bedroom apt in south austin with a gym."
  • u/Adorable-Bit222, on the lifestyle differential: "If you're coming from NYC the rents will seem pretty shockingly cheap, especially for what you get. You don't have to be a millionaire to have a dishwasher and in unit washer/dryer here."

The honest 2026 floor for living alone in central Austin is roughly $1,500 to $1,700 in rent (one-bedroom, with the fees Quade flags). Comfort, per the threads, starts at about $60,000 in salary and runs through $85,000 at the top of "comfortable but careful." Above $100,000 the math becomes generous.

A bungalow in Austin's Hyde Park neighborhood, fronted by a tree-lined sidewalk.

Hyde Park, one of the four central neighborhoods in the dense corridor. A one-bedroom in this ZIP runs roughly $1,600 to $1,900 in 2026, with the fees Quade flags adding $50 to $100 a month on top.

Is the Austin tech job market good for young professionals?

The career math

Do not move without an offer.

The Austin tech market cooled in 2023 and has not fully recovered. The threads from late 2025 are unusually direct about it.

Bureau of Labor Statistics metro tech employment for Austin sat at roughly 165,000 jobs in late 2025, down from the 2022 peak. Senior IC pay still runs about 85 percent of San Francisco. Entry-level engineering roles run roughly $85,000 to $120,000 base, depending on company and discipline.

The cooler market shows up in the threads. A December 2025 r/Austin thread titled "Austin job market bad enough that people are moving out to find work?" (531 ups) opened with the OP describing two friends who had been unemployed for six months across different industries. The single most-upvoted reply (1,482 ups) was a non-Austin observation: that the AI-driven job-posting environment is making it nearly impossible to find tech work online anywhere, and that in-person hiring events are doing the work of 2010-era job sites.

That is the broader context, and Austin in 2026 is not exempt from it. A November 2025 thread from a recent grad working as a software engineer in DFW, considering a same-salary move to Austin, drew calmer replies because the move came with an offer in hand:

  • u/rollypollyollyy: "As a software engineer you should be just fine. Get a roommate if it's going to be too tight but the rents in austin have gone down a lot."
  • u/GeneralOptimal10: "Other companies shouldn't matter as you can always move later, especially since it's in-state."

The honest signal for 2026 is: do not move to Austin in your 20s without a confirmed offer in writing. The market is recovering but it is not absorbing speculative arrivals.

A group of young adults sharing a phone screen at a wood table inside an Austin cafe.

The Austin tech market cooled in 2023 and 2024. What softened the landing for the transplants who came anyway is the city itself, not the job market.

How do you make friends in Austin in your 20s?

The social math

The friend formation does not happen passively.

Austin's friend density is real. It does not arrive by accident.

The most-cited Austin upside in the long-running r/Austin threads is not the weather or the taxes. It is that social life forms faster than people expect, in a way that does not happen in lower-density US cities. The mechanism is what the IRS migration data describes: a self-selected population of recent arrivals, almost all of whom are also looking for new friends.

The catch is that the friend formation does not happen passively. A 2023 r/Austin thread on the "I love Austin, but I need some f---ing friends" meetup (1,733 ups) was full of regulars endorsing the same playbook: pick one structured repeating activity by month six. A 6 a.m. run club. The climbing gym at Crux. A specific church or synagogue. A rec-league kickball team. Almost every transplant who reports being lonely past month twelve never picked one.

This is more important in your 20s than in any other decade because the default arrival pattern is "alone, with a job, no built-in social structure." The job will not give you friends past two months. The apartment building will not. The structured repeating activity will. An April 2026 r/AskAustin thread on making friends as an adult (139 ups) had a long line of comments converging on the same point: you cannot meet anyone if you are not consistently in the same place at the same time as the same people. Austin makes that easier than most cities. It does not do it for you.

Ask ten apartment websites for the best neighborhoods in Austin for young professionals and you'll get ten nearly identical lists. What's missing is everything that actually matters: Can you afford it?

Public threads.
Primary data.
Named editor.

That’s Landed.

The honest verdict

Three conditions, in order.

Austin in your 20s makes sense if you have a confirmed offer of $60,000 or more, you can afford rent in the dense corridor, and you will commit to one structured repeating activity by month six. Each of those three is a real filter. Skipping any one of them is the failure mode.

If all three are true, the move pays off in roughly the way the threads describe. The first two months feel like nothing because Austin's social life starts at month four. The first paycheck is bigger than your old paycheck by about $230 a month and feels smaller. The first February is the moment you stop checking flights back. The first lease renewal is when you decide whether you are staying.

If any one of the three conditions is false, the move is the most expensive lifestyle change you will make in your 20s. There is no shortcut around the conditions. There is also no algorithmic version of them. Read the full Austin guide for the rest of the picture, run the cost calculator against your specific salary, and check the neighborhoods page for the long-form take on each one. Moving with kids? See the family version of this guide.

Nathaniel Peters, Founder & Editor