Off Market
Original Bertram, TX Real Estate
Original Bertram is the historic core of Bertram, Texas, a quiet Burnet County town rooted in ranching tradition and Hill Country character. Situated along US-183 roughly 40 miles northwest of Austin, this area offers a slower pace without sacrificing proximity to the growing communities of the Highland Lakes region. The original platted blocks of Bertram reflect the town's late 19th-century founding, with a mix of older homes, modest lots, and a genuine small-town atmosphere that stands apart from the planned subdivisions spreading across the surrounding Hill Country. Buyers drawn here tend to value authenticity, affordability, and wide-open space over manicured amenities. Neighborhoods | Schools | Market Overview | Getting Around | Lifestyle | FAQs
No active listings found
There are currently no active listings matching your search. Check out nearby homes or recent sales below.
Recent Sales in This Area
Off Market
Off Market
Off Market
Off Market
Off Market
About Original Bertram, TX Real Estate
Neighborhoods in Original Bertram
Original Bertram refers to the town's founding plat, the grid of streets and lots laid out when Bertram was established in 1882 as a stop along the Austin and Northwestern Railroad. The neighborhood is compact by Hill Country standards, with homes sitting on standard town lots rather than the larger acreage tracts common just outside city limits. You'll find a mix of older craftsman-style homes, mid-century ranches, and a handful of more recently updated properties tucked among mature cedar elms and live oaks. Unlike the master-planned communities spreading through Williamson County to the east, Original Bertram has an organic, unpolished character that appeals to buyers who appreciate a genuine piece of Texas history.
The surrounding town of Bertram extends beyond the original plat and includes newer residential streets, but the historic core remains the most distinctive part of the community. For buyers interested in larger acreage parcels, the areas just outside town limits open up considerably, though those properties typically fall under different MLS neighborhood designations. Within Original Bertram itself, the inventory is small and transactions are relatively infrequent, which means patience is a virtue and good listings move quickly when they surface.
Schools in Original Bertram
Homes in Original Bertram are served by Burnet Consolidated Independent School District, one of the more established districts in the Highland Lakes area. Bertram Elementary School, located in Bertram, serves the younger grades before students transition to Burnet Middle School and Burnet High School, both in the neighboring city of Burnet, roughly 14 miles to the west. Burnet CISD covers a wide geographic area across the Hill Country and has a long track record in the community. The district's relatively small enrollment means students tend to develop strong connections with teachers and staff, and extracurricular programs in athletics, agriculture (FFA is strong here), and fine arts are well-regarded locally.
For buyers coming from larger metro areas, Burnet CISD offers a meaningfully different experience from suburban Austin-area districts, one that reflects the rural Hill Country culture of the region. It's worth visiting the campus and speaking with district staff directly to get a current picture of programs and enrollment trends.
Real Estate Market Overview
Original Bertram is a very small, low-volume real estate market. Because the neighborhood represents the historic platted blocks of a small town, the total housing stock is limited and ownership turnover is slow. When homes do come available, they tend to appeal to a specific type of buyer, someone looking for an affordable Hill Country foothold, a primary residence with genuine small-town character, or an investment in a community that has seen renewed interest as Hill Country land values have climbed across Burnet County.
Buyers should approach this market with realistic expectations about condition. Many of the homes in Original Bertram are older and may require updating. On the other hand, prices here reflect that reality, and buyers who are willing to put in work can find value that simply does not exist in the polished new-construction corridors further east. If you're comparing options, the broader Bertram area and neighboring Burnet both offer a wider selection at any given time. Marble Falls, about 25 miles to the south, provides a more active market with more inventory if your search warrants a wider lens.
For a broader look at Hill Country and Austin-area real estate options, explore Austin area homes for sale to compare what different communities in the region have to offer at your price point.
Getting Around Original Bertram
Bertram sits at the intersection of US-183 and TX-29, two of the main east-west and north-south corridors through the Hill Country. US-183 runs directly toward Austin, making the drive to the metro feasible, though it is not a quick commute. The roughly 40-mile trip to downtown Austin typically runs 50 to 65 minutes depending on traffic and time of day, with congestion becoming a factor once you clear the Georgetown and Liberty Hill corridors and approach the US-183/US-183A interchange.
For everyday needs, the town of Bertram has basic services, a post office, and a handful of local businesses, but most residents rely on Burnet for grocery shopping, medical care, and a broader range of retail. Burnet's downtown square has seen investment in recent years and now hosts a growing number of restaurants and shops. Marble Falls is the regional hub for the Highland Lakes area and offers the most complete selection of services, including the Baylor Scott and White Medical Center at Marble Falls. Round Rock and Georgetown are accessible via US-183 for major retail and healthcare needs closer to the Austin metro.
Hill Country Living in Bertram
Life in Original Bertram is genuinely rural. The town is small enough that you will recognize faces at the local diner, the feed store, and the Friday night football games. The agricultural roots run deep here, and that cultural identity, ranching, FFA, rodeo, and wide-open land, shapes the community in ways that newer Hill Country developments simply cannot replicate.
The surrounding Burnet County landscape offers some of the best outdoor recreation in central Texas. Inks Lake State Park and Lake Lyndon B. Johnson are both within a comfortable drive, offering swimming, kayaking, camping, and fishing. The Colorado River arm of the Highland Lakes system winds through the region, and land values reflect the ongoing demand for lakefront and lake-access property throughout this corridor. Highland Haven, Granite Shoals, and Meadowlakes are among the nearby communities clustered around the lakes if waterfront access is part of your criteria.
For buyers who want Hill Country land without the premium attached to lake-adjacent addresses, the Bertram area and surrounding communities like Briggs and Cottonwood Shores offer an entry point into Burnet County living that remains accessible relative to what comparable land costs further south and east.
Neuhaus Realty Group works throughout the Burnet County and Hill Country market and can help you evaluate whether Original Bertram or surrounding communities align with your goals. Reach out when you're ready to explore what this corner of the Hill Country has to offer.
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.
Schedule a Consultation