Escrow Accounts Explained for Austin Homeowners
Most Austin homeowners with a mortgage pay more each month than just principal and interest — the extra amount typically goes into an escrow account, and understanding how it works avoids confusion when the payment changes.
What Escrow Actually Is
An escrow account is a fund the mortgage servicer maintains on the homeowner's behalf, collecting a portion of the annual property tax and homeowners insurance bill with each monthly mortgage payment, then paying those bills directly when they come due.
Why It's Common in Texas
Given Texas's comparatively high property tax rates, escrowing for taxes specifically matters more here than in lower-tax states — the tax portion of an Austin escrow payment is often a larger share of the total monthly payment than in many other markets.
The Annual Escrow Analysis
Servicers perform an annual escrow analysis comparing what was collected against what was actually paid out, adjusting the monthly escrow amount going forward to account for any shortfall or overage — this is why a mortgage payment can increase or decrease even when the interest rate hasn't changed.
Why Austin Payments Often Rise
Rising property values and correspondingly higher property tax assessments are a common reason Austin homeowners see their total mortgage payment increase year over year, even with a fixed interest rate — the principal and interest portion stays the same, but the escrow portion adjusts to the new tax bill.
Protesting Your Property Tax Valuation
Because a higher appraised value directly increases the escrow-funded tax portion of a mortgage payment, homeowners who believe their county appraisal district valuation is too high have the right to protest it annually — a step worth taking seriously given its direct effect on monthly housing costs.
Can You Avoid Escrow?
Some loan programs and lenders allow homeowners to waive escrow and pay tax and insurance bills directly, sometimes for a fee or with a minimum down payment requirement — this shifts responsibility (and the risk of forgetting a large annual bill) onto the homeowner, a trade-off worth weighing carefully.
Frequently Asked Questions
The escrow portion of the payment, which covers property tax and insurance, adjusts based on an annual escrow analysis — rising property valuations and tax bills are a common reason the total payment increases even when principal and interest stay the same.
Yes. Because a higher appraised value directly increases the tax portion collected through escrow, homeowners have the right to protest their county appraisal district valuation annually.




