Texas City Showdown: Austin vs. Houston vs. Dallas
More than 500,000 people move to Texas every year, and most choose one of three major metros: Austin, Houston, or Dallas-Fort Worth. Each offers a dramatically different lifestyle, price point, and opportunity set. Here is an honest, numbers-driven comparison.
At a Glance
| Category | Austin | Houston | Dallas-Fort Worth |
|---|---|---|---|
| Metro population | ~2.3M | ~7.3M | ~7.7M |
| Median home price | $495,000 | $310,000 | $395,000 |
| Job market focus | Tech, government | Energy, healthcare, shipping | Finance, tech, telecom |
| State income tax | 0% | 0% | 0% |
| Terrain | Hill Country | Flat, coastal plain | Flat, rolling plains |
| Flood risk | Some | High (significant) | Moderate |
| Winter weather | Mild | Mild | Occasional ice storms |
Cost of Living Comparison
Housing
- Austin: $495,000 median — most expensive in Texas
- DFW: $395,000 median — strong growth market, more affordable than Austin
- Houston: $310,000 median — most affordable of the three major metros
Houston's housing affordability is its biggest advantage for budget-conscious buyers. A $300,000 budget buys a very good home in Houston's suburbs (Katy, Sugar Land, The Woodlands, Pearland). The same budget limits you to far-suburb Austin or low-end Houston.
Property Taxes
All three cities have no state income tax and relatively similar property tax rates (1.8–2.5% effective). Houston's Harris County runs 2.0–2.4%; DFW's Tarrant and Collin counties run 1.9–2.3%; Travis County Austin runs 1.8–2.2%.
Employment: Where Are the Jobs?
Austin: Tech Hub of Texas
Apple, Tesla, Samsung, Oracle, Dell, Google, Amazon, and hundreds of startups. Austin has the highest concentration of tech employment in Texas and is competing with Seattle and Austin for top tech talent. Unemployment: ~3.5%.
Houston: Energy Capital
ExxonMobil, Chevron, Shell, BP, Halliburton, Schlumberger. Houston is the global capital of the energy industry plus has the Texas Medical Center (largest medical complex in the world). Strong healthcare, petrochemical engineering, and maritime/shipping employment. Unemployment: ~4.2%.
Dallas-Fort Worth: Finance and Corporate HQ
American Airlines, AT&T, Toyota North America, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America regional HQs. DFW is the corporate HQ capital of Texas — massive financial services sector plus growing tech (Toyota, Tesla distribution, Amazon). Unemployment: ~3.8%.
Lifestyle: Very Different Vibes
Austin: Young, Quirky, Outdoors-Focused
Live music, Barton Springs, Zilker Park, food trucks, SXSW. Austin feels like a large college town (UT Austin enrolls 50,000+ students). Young median age (34), progressive politics, strong outdoor culture. Limited diversity compared to Houston but growing.
Houston: Most Diverse City in America
Houston is the most ethnically and racially diverse major city in the United States. Authentic cuisines from every corner of the world are represented at neighborhood restaurants — Vietnamese in Bellaire, Indian in the Sugar Land corridor, Tex-Mex and Central American throughout. The Museum District, Theater District, and Buffalo Bayou Park rival any US city.
Dallas-Fort Worth: Business, Suburban, Pro Sports
DFW is Texas's business city — conservative, suburban, car-dependent, and proud of it. Cowboys, Rangers, Mavericks, Stars — DFW has all four major pro sports teams. The suburbs (Frisco, McKinney, Southlake, Colleyville) are among the most livable family communities in the US.
Flood Risk: A Critical Consideration
Houston: Genuine, significant flood risk. Hurricane Harvey flooded hundreds of thousands of homes. Many Houston neighborhoods carry substantial FEMA flood zone exposure. Flood insurance is often required and expensive. Research flood history carefully before any Houston purchase.
Austin: Moderate risk. Flash flooding in creek corridors (Onion Creek, Waller Creek) is real. The 2013 Wimberley floods were catastrophic. Most homes are not in flood zones, but always verify before buying.
Dallas-Fort Worth: Moderate risk. Some DFW neighborhoods along the Trinity River and its tributaries have flood history. Generally lower risk than Houston.
Military Families: Which Texas City?
San Antonio — Best for Active Duty (not in this comparison but the clear winner)
If active duty is your situation, San Antonio (JBSA) is the overwhelming choice.
For Veterans (Post-Service):
- Austin: Strong tech and government employment, no state income tax, growing veteran community
- Houston: VA Medical Center, large veteran population, more affordable housing for VA loan buyers
- Dallas-Fort Worth: Naval Air Station Fort Worth, large veteran community, corporate employment, very strong housing value
Which City is Right for You?
Choose Austin if:
- You work in tech or need access to tech employers
- You value outdoor recreation, live music, and cultural vibrancy
- You can afford the premium ($495K+ median home price)
Choose Houston if:
- You work in energy, healthcare, or maritime industries
- Maximum affordability is your priority ($310K median, lots available under $250K)
- You value cultural diversity and authentic international cuisine
- You don't mind flat terrain and flood risk management
Choose Dallas-Fort Worth if:
- You work in finance, corporate, or telecom
- You want a strong family suburb with top schools (Frisco ISD, Southlake Carroll ISD)
- You want affordability with better topography than Houston
- You're a pro sports fan
Frequently Asked Questions
Houston is significantly cheaper. Median home prices are $310,000 vs. $495,000 in Austin. Houston's suburbs offer excellent quality at 35–40% lower housing costs. Austin wins on tech employment and outdoor lifestyle.
San Antonio (JBSA) is #1 for active duty. For post-service veterans: DFW offers best employment-to-housing-value ratio; Austin has the strongest tech job market; Houston has the most affordable homes and the VA Medical Center.




