How does overall cost of living compare?
New Braunfels sits at roughly 104 on the cost-of-living index, about 4% above the national average. Austin runs 115-140 depending on the neighborhood, and Dallas lands around 102-103. The gap between New Braunfels and Austin is mostly driven by housing costs. Groceries, utilities, and healthcare price out near or below the national average in all three cities.
For relocators from California (index 140-160) or the Northeast (130-150), all three Texas cities represent massive savings. The difference between them is where you want to live, not whether Texas is cheaper than where you are now.
How do home prices compare?
New Braunfels median home prices run roughly $350,000 to $445,000 depending on the source and time window. Comparable Austin suburbs like Dripping Springs, Lakeway, or Buda price 15-25% higher for similar square footage and lot size. Dallas suburbs like Frisco, McKinney, and Prosper are competitive on price but offer flat prairie lots instead of Hill Country terrain.
The luxury tier tells a bigger story. A $1M budget in New Braunfels buys a custom home on 1-3 acres in a gated community with river or ridgetop views. That same budget in Austin buys a production home on a quarter-acre lot in a master-planned suburb. In Dallas, you get square footage but no topography.
What about property taxes across the three cities?
All three cities are in Texas, so all three have zero state income tax and rely heavily on property taxes. New Braunfels effective rates run about 1.79%. Austin and Travis County run 1.8% to 2.1%. Dallas and Collin/Denton counties run 1.8% to 2.4% depending on the school district.
Because New Braunfels home values are lower, the actual dollar tax bill on a comparable home is meaningfully less. A $500,000 home in New Braunfels generates roughly $8,950 in annual property tax. A $600,000 home in an Austin suburb generates $10,800 to $12,600.
What daily expenses are different?
Groceries and dining are slightly cheaper in New Braunfels than Austin, mostly because commercial rents are lower and restaurant pricing follows. Utilities run about the same across all three Texas cities. Insurance is the wild card: homeowners insurance in the Hill Country has climbed due to hail, wind, and wildfire exposure, and quotes on a $500K home currently run $2,400 to $3,600 annually.
The biggest cost-of-living advantage New Braunfels has over Austin is commute. Average commute times are 20-30 minutes instead of 45-60, which translates to gas, wear, and time savings that never show up in a cost-of-living index but add up to thousands of dollars and hundreds of hours a year.