Austin Real Estate Mid-2026: 7 Neighborhoods Where Prices Will Recover First
Austin’s metro-wide housing correction has dominated headlines for three years. But treating “Austin” as a single market is a mistake that costs buyers and sellers real money. While the Austin-Round Rock MSA median home price has declined 3.6% year-over-year to $412,000, individual neighborhoods tell radically different stories. Some ZIP codes have already bottomed. Others still have 5–10% of downside left.
We analyzed permit filings, MLS absorption rates, employer expansion announcements, and rental yield data across every major Austin submarket to identify the 7 neighborhoods most likely to recover first — and the 3 where patience still pays.
Why Neighborhood-Level Analysis Matters Now
In a rising market, everything goes up. In a correction, dispersion widens dramatically. Consider the spread: while the overall MSA is down 3.6%, East Austin (78702) is down just 1.2% while Far Northwest Austin (78729) has seen declines of 8.4%. That 7-point gap means a $400,000 home in 78702 lost roughly $4,800 in value, while a $400,000 home in 78729 lost $33,600. Same city, same price point, wildly different outcomes.
The neighborhoods recovering first share three characteristics:
•Employment proximity — within 15 minutes of major tech/biotech campuses
•Supply constraint — limited buildable land or zoning restrictions capping new inventory
•Demand floor — rental yields above 5.5%, creating investor price support
The 7 Recovery Leaders
1. East Austin (78702) — Already Bouncing
•Median price: $585,000 (down 1.2% YoY)
•Days on market: 38 (vs. 91 metro average)
•Absorption rate: 4.1 months of supply
East Austin has quietly become the tightest submarket in the metro. The combination of walkability, restaurant density, and proximity to downtown has created persistent demand even through the correction. New-build supply in 78702 is essentially zero — there’s nowhere left to build. The February pending sales count was up 22% year-over-year, suggesting this neighborhood may post positive price growth by Q3 2026.
Signal: Homes priced under $550,000 in 78702 are now receiving multiple offers within 21 days. This is recovery behavior.
2. Mueller / Windsor Park (78723) — The Infrastructure Play
•Median price: $495,000 (down 2.8% YoY)
•Days on market: 44
•Absorption rate: 4.5 months
The Mueller master-planned community continues to benefit from completed infrastructure investments that surrounding neighborhoods lack: dedicated bike lanes, mixed-use retail, parks, and the Thinkery children’s museum. The Dell Children’s Medical Center campus expansion, adding 200+ permanent jobs, creates a demand anchor. Windsor Park, the adjacent legacy neighborhood, offers entry at $425,000–$475,000 with identical school zones.
Signal: Rental yields in 78723 average 5.8%, well above the metro average of 4.9%. Investor buyers are setting a floor.
3. South Congress / Travis Heights (78704) — The Luxury Bottleneck
•Median price: $725,000 (down 3.1% YoY)
•Days on market: 52
•Absorption rate: 5.0 months
78704 has corrected more than East Austin because its higher price point made it more rate-sensitive. But the fundamentals remain exceptional: SoCo retail vacancy is under 3%, the neighborhood is walkable to downtown, and the lot sizes make teardown-and-rebuild economics increasingly attractive. The $600,000–$700,000 band is where we see the most activity. Above $900,000, the market remains soft.
Signal: Close-to-list ratios have improved from 88% in October 2025 to 93% in February 2026. Sellers are regaining pricing power.
4. Cedar Park / Leander (78613, 78641) — The Commuter Value Play
•Median price: $415,000 (down 4.2% YoY)
•Days on market: 58
•Absorption rate: 5.3 months
Cedar Park and Leander took one of the hardest hits during the correction because they were among the biggest beneficiaries of the 2021–2022 boom. But three catalysts are now converging: the MetroRail Red Line extension (breaking ground Q3 2026), Apple’s expanded Parmer Lane campus absorbing 3,000+ workers, and the completion of 183A tollway improvements. The price-per-square-foot in Cedar Park ($195/sqft) is now 35% below Austin proper, the widest gap since 2019.
Signal: New construction permits in Cedar Park dropped 41% YoY, meaning the supply overhang that depressed prices is being absorbed faster than it’s being replaced.
5. South Austin / Slaughter Lane (78748, 78749) — The School District Premium
•Median price: $475,000 (down 2.5% YoY)
•Days on market: 48
•Absorption rate: 4.7 months
These ZIP codes consistently outperform during corrections because of Eanes ISD overlap and proximity to both the Southwest Parkway tech corridor and Mopac. Family buyers in the $450,000–$550,000 range are relatively rate-insensitive because they’re buying for school access, not investment returns. The buyer pool here is dominated by dual-income tech households with down payments north of 20%, making them less affected by mortgage rate volatility.
Signal: The share of cash buyers in 78748/78749 hit 31% in February, up from 24% a year ago. Cash buyers signal confidence and accelerate price stabilization.
6. Domain / North Burnet (78758) — The Employment Magnet
•Median price: $380,000 (down 3.0% YoY)
•Days on market: 51
•Absorption rate: 4.9 months
The Domain area is the densest employment center in Austin outside downtown. Meta, Amazon, Indeed, and GM’s Austin Innovation Center are all within a 10-minute drive. The condo and townhome market here took a beating in 2024–2025 as new supply flooded in, but deliveries are now falling sharply. Only 800 multifamily units are under construction in 78758, down from 3,400 two years ago. With employers pulling workers back to office 3–4 days per week, proximity to the Domain is regaining its premium.
Signal: Studio and 1-bedroom condos under $300,000 are seeing sub-30 day time to contract. This is the entry-level segment recovering first.
7. Round Rock / Old Settlers (78664, 78681) — Samsung’s Gravity Well
•Median price: $395,000 (down 3.8% YoY)
•Days on market: 55
•Absorption rate: 5.1 months
Samsung’s $17 billion Taylor fab is the largest single employer investment in Central Texas history. While the fab is technically in Williamson County (Taylor), the employee housing demand radiates primarily into Round Rock and Hutto. Samsung has indicated a 2,000-person hiring ramp through 2027. Dell’s Round Rock headquarters, despite layoffs, still employs 13,000+ locally. The combination of two major employers within 15 miles gives Round Rock a demand floor that pure suburban bedroom communities lack.
Signal: Builder incentives in Round Rock have been pulled back 15–20% from their Q4 2025 peaks. Builders are reading the same demand signals.
3 Neighborhoods Where the Correction Has Further to Run
Dripping Springs / Bee Cave (78620, 78738)
Median prices remain above $650,000 despite limited employment nearby. The luxury rural lifestyle premium expanded too far during COVID remote-work migration. With return-to-office accelerating, commute times to downtown (40–55 minutes) are a headwind. Expect another 3–5% decline before stabilization in late 2026.
Far Northwest Austin / Jollyville (78729, 78750)
These neighborhoods were heavily dependent on IBM and older tech campus employment that has not returned post-COVID. New apartment supply along the 183 corridor continues to depress rents and create alternative housing options. We see 4–6% additional downside.
Pflugerville (78660)
Pflugerville expanded aggressively in 2021–2023 with large-scale production homebuilders. The result: a persistent supply overhang that will take 12–18 more months to absorb. Builder incentives (rate buydowns, closing cost credits) equivalent to 8–10% of list price remain in effect, artificially inflating reported sale prices. The true market-clearing price is likely 5–7% below current medians.
How to Use This Data
If You’re a Buyer
1.Target recovery leaders now. Neighborhoods with sub-5 months of supply and declining days-on-market are already in recovery. Waiting for metro-wide data to confirm the bottom means missing the best prices in the best neighborhoods.
2.Avoid “cheap” neighborhoods without employment anchors. A low price per square foot in a submarket with no major employer within 20 minutes is a value trap, not a value play.
3.Negotiate hardest in the “further to run” areas. If you love Dripping Springs for lifestyle reasons, you have 3–6 more months of negotiating leverage. Use it.
If You’re a Seller
1.Price to the recovery neighborhoods. If your home is in 78702, 78704, or 78723, you can price within 2–3% of recent comps. The days of 10% haircuts are ending in these ZIPs.
2.Invest in staging and condition. In a market where 47.8% of listings have price reductions, the homes that sell fastest are the ones that show the best. A $5,000 staging investment in a recovery neighborhood returns 3x–5x in avoided price reductions.
3.Consider timing carefully in distressed ZIPs. If you’re in 78729 or 78660, listing in spring/summer 2026 will capture more buyer activity, but expect to close 5–7% below your Zillow estimate.
If You’re an Investor
1.Rental yields above 5.5% in 78723 and 78758 represent cash-flow-positive acquisitions at current rates. These won’t last once prices stabilize and cap rates compress.
2.Watch the permit data. Neighborhoods where new construction permits have dropped 30%+ (Cedar Park, Domain) are self-correcting their supply problems. The math favors existing inventory holders.
3.Avoid Pflugerville for value-add plays until builder incentive programs expire. You’re competing against new-build pricing that subsidizes buyers with rate buydowns you can’t match.
The Bottom Line
Austin’s correction is not a single event — it’s a rolling wave that hits different neighborhoods at different times. The ZIP codes closest to employment centers, with the least new supply, and the strongest rental demand are already showing recovery signals. Metro-wide statistics will lag these neighborhood-level moves by 3–6 months.
The smartest move in mid-2026 isn’t to wait for a headline that says “Austin market has bottomed.” By the time that headline runs, the best neighborhoods will have already repriced 5–10% higher. The data says the recovery leaders are bottoming *now*. The question is whether you’re positioned to act on it.
Data sources: Austin Board of REALTORS (ABOR) February 2026 report, CoStar multifamily analytics, City of Austin permit database, Texas Workforce Commission employment data, Zillow Home Value Index, Redfin market tracker. Analysis by Austin Signals.