Lampasas, TX Real Estate
Lampasas sits at the northern edge of the Texas Hill Country, where spring-fed creeks, cedar-dotted ridgelines, and wide-open ranchland define the landscape. The town has a genuine small-town character that's increasingly rare in Central Texas, built around a historic downtown square and anchored by the natural springs that gave the city its name. Most buyers coming to Lampasas are looking for acreage, elbow room, and a pace of life that Austin and its suburbs simply can't offer anymore. The real estate here runs the full spectrum from modest in-town homes to working cattle ranches covering hundreds of acres. Neighborhoods | Schools | Market Overview | Lifestyle & Outdoors | Getting Around | FAQs
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About Lampasas, TX Real Estate
Neighborhoods & Subdivisions in Lampasas
Lampasas real estate is dominated by land, farms, and ranches rather than traditional subdivisions, and that's exactly what draws most buyers here. When you do find planned communities, they tend to offer large lots with rural character rather than dense suburban layouts. Cross Timber Ranch is one of the more active subdivisions in the area, offering lots with the kind of space and tree cover that the name suggests. It's popular with buyers who want a deeded address with some community structure while still keeping plenty of acreage underfoot.
Ranches Blackbuck Ridge is another notable option, with properties that lean toward the ranchette and small-farm end of the spectrum. Buyers looking at this area are often drawn in by the Hill Country views and the wildlife that comes with them. Rolling Hills Reserve offers a mix of finished homes and vacant lots, giving buyers the choice to build or move in. Stargazer Ranch lives up to its name with dark-sky conditions that are genuinely hard to find this close to Central Texas population centers.
Hurst Place and Buffalo Pass round out the in-market subdivision options, with Buffalo Pass offering accessible price points for buyers entering the Lampasas market. Outside of these named subdivisions, a large share of Lampasas County listings are raw land tracts and working farms, many without a subdivision name at all. Average lot sizes here tell the real story: this is ranch country, not subdivision country. If you're browsing Austin area homes for sale and land keeps pulling your attention west, Lampasas deserves a serious look.
Schools in Lampasas
The majority of residential properties in the city of Lampasas are served by Lampasas ISD, which operates a tight-knit K-12 system across the district. Elementary students in the city typically attend Hanna Springs Elementary or Kline Whitis Elementary, feeding into Lampasas Middle School and Lampasas High School. The district is known for strong athletic programs and a community culture that genuinely shows up for its schools.
Properties in the county's outer edges may fall into different districts depending on location. Burnet CISD serves portions of the southern county near the Burnet County line, with RJ Richey Elementary and Taylor Creek Elementary among its campuses. Evant ISD is a very small rural district in the northern reaches of the county. If schools are a deciding factor in which parcel or subdivision you target, verifying the exact district boundary before making an offer is always worthwhile, especially on rural land where district lines can split tracts in unexpected ways.
Real Estate Market Overview
Lampasas County's real estate market is unlike most markets in the Austin metro corridor because land and agricultural properties make up the majority of active inventory rather than traditional residential homes. Buyers here are often weighing residential acreage against farm and ranch listings, and the two categories behave differently. Residential homes in town tend to move on a more typical timeline, while large rural tracts and specialty ranches can sit longer as sellers wait for the right buyer with the right vision.
The market has seen some price softening from the post-pandemic peak, which has actually improved conditions for buyers who were priced out of Hill Country acreage a few years ago. New construction in Lampasas is limited compared to the Austin suburbs, with a handful of small local builders including Bent Tree Construction and Grand Oaks active in the area. Buyers looking for new construction will find fewer options here than in Burnet or Marble Falls, but that scarcity is part of what keeps the area's rural character intact. Neuhaus Realty Group works with buyers across the Hill Country and can help you evaluate land and residential listings with equal depth.
Lifestyle & Outdoors
Lampasas has a downtown square that still functions the way downtowns were meant to, with local restaurants, a hardware store, and the kind of community gathering spots that get lost in larger cities. The historic Hancock Springs and Hanna Springs swimming areas are genuine local institutions, fed by natural springs that have drawn people to this area for well over a century.
Lampasas County sits along the Colorado River drainage, and recreational access to area lakes and river segments is a real part of daily life here. Inks Lake and Lake Buchanan are within reasonable driving distance, making this part of the Hill Country a viable base for people who want lake access without paying lake-front premiums. Hunting is woven into the fabric of life here, and many of the ranches and larger tracts on the market are priced with hunting rights and wildlife management value in mind. Whitetail deer, axis, and blackbuck antelope populations are well established across the county.
Getting Around Lampasas
US-183 is the main artery connecting Lampasas to the broader region. Heading south, US-183 runs through Burnet and Marble Falls before connecting into the Austin metro, putting downtown Austin roughly 70 miles from Lampasas. The drive is scenic but not fast, and buyers commuting to Austin daily should factor in realistic drive times rather than straight-line distance. US-281 to the east connects toward Burnet and eventually US-183, offering another route south.
Killeen and the Fort Hood area are closer, roughly 30 to 35 miles east via US-190, which makes Lampasas a practical option for military personnel and contractors based at Fort Cavazos. The city of Temple is also accessible within an hour heading east, providing additional employment and medical center options. Buyers coming from Kempner to the east or Lometa to the southwest are already in the Lampasas County orbit and often look at Lampasas listings as part of a broader area search. Most residents here are comfortable with the reality that a longer drive is the trade-off for the land, the quiet, and the quality of life that comes with it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Ed Neuhaus
Broker / Owner, Neuhaus Realty Group · TREC #593057
Licensed Texas Realtor since 2007 serving Austin and the Hill Country. Investor, STR operator, and straight-talking advisor for buyers, sellers, and investors. 16 five-star reviews.
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