San Antonio, TX Homes for Sale
San Antonio is Texas's second-largest city and one of its most geographically diverse real estate markets, spanning everything from revitalized urban neighborhoods near the Pearl District and Southtown to sprawling suburban corridors along Loop 1604 and large-acreage tracts on Bexar County's rural fringe. Eleven school districts serve the city's vast footprint, military installations anchor key employment corridors, and the Hill Country begins right at the city's northwestern edge. Buyers can find genuine range here, from entry-level urban product in established inner neighborhoods to custom homes on generous lots in communities like Hunters Ranch and Lonesome Dove Estates. Neighborhoods | Schools | Market Overview | Getting Around | Lifestyle | FAQs
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About San Antonio, TX Homes for Sale
Neighborhoods & Subdivisions in San Antonio
San Antonio covers more than 460 square miles, so where you buy matters as much as what you buy. The northwest side, which flows naturally into Helotes and toward Fair Oaks Ranch, draws buyers who want newer construction with room to breathe and Hill Country scenery close by. Communities like Hunters Ranch and Lonesome Dove Estates sit in this corridor, offering single-family homes on generous lots with access to the Northside ISD campus network. Fair Oaks Ranch pushes that even further, with larger estate-style properties and an equestrian feel.
The northeast side clusters around Randolph Air Force Base and connects to a dense band of established suburbs including Universal City, Selma, and Live Oak. This corridor has long been shaped by the military presence at Randolph, and it remains a strong market for buyers seeking solid suburban infrastructure at accessible price points. Windcrest sits within this band as well, offering quick access to both Loop 410 and IH-35.
Closer to the urban core, the historic San Jose neighborhood and areas like Los Angeles Heights carry the texture of old San Antonio, with smaller lots, craftsman-era bungalows, and a walkable feel that has attracted steady reinvestment over the past decade. Highland Park on the near north side is another established pocket with mature trees and mid-century housing stock. The Arts Residences near the Pearl District and Southtown reflect the city's growing appetite for urban living, including condo and loft-style product that does not show up much in traditional suburban submarkets.
Buyers interested in land, farm tracts, or agricultural-zoned property will find options along Bexar County's outer edges, particularly toward the southwest where Medina County begins. The MLS regularly shows a mix of platted rural communities and unplatted acreage in these areas. On the eastern side of the city, Converse and Elmendorf offer suburban and semi-rural alternatives for buyers who want more space without moving far from San Antonio's employment centers.
Schools in San Antonio
Eleven independent school districts serve San Antonio's footprint, and school assignment is determined entirely by address, not by city limits. Confirming your district before making an offer is a practical step that many buyers skip, particularly when buying near district boundary lines.
Alamo Heights ISD serves the enclave of Alamo Heights within San Antonio's boundaries and consistently ranks among the most recognized districts in the metro. North East ISD covers the Stone Oak corridor and much of the northeast side, with high schools including Ronald Reagan and Clark. Northside ISD is the largest district in Texas by enrollment and covers the northwest and southwest portions of the city, with high schools including Holmes, Marshall, Brennan, Harlan, and Taft each serving distinct quadrants of the sprawling district.
San Antonio ISD covers the urban core, including schools like Brackenridge, Edison, Fox Tech, and Lanier. East Central ISD and Judson ISD serve the eastern portions of the city, with Veterans Memorial High School (Judson) and Judson High School drawing from communities near the eastern Loop 410 corridor. Harlandale ISD covers the south side, Southwest ISD handles the southwest, and Southside ISD serves communities near the city's southeastern edge.
Comal ISD and Medina Valley ISD touch the city's outer growth corridors. Medina Valley High School and Medina Valley Middle School serve buyers who settle in communities near the far northwest, while Comal ISD begins just north toward New Braunfels. Middle schools across the metro include Pieper Ranch Middle, Woodlake Hills, Rawlinson, and Connally, among others, depending on which part of the city your home sits in.
Real Estate Market Overview
San Antonio's real estate market is one of the most range-diverse in Texas. The same city contains entry-level urban bungalows, mid-size homes in master-planned communities, commercial investment properties in growing retail corridors, and agricultural tracts on the rural fringe. That breadth means buyers need to be precise about which submarket they are actually shopping, because pricing and competition vary significantly by location and property type.
Compared to the Austin metro, San Antonio historically offers more accessible price points across comparable property types, which draws buyers priced out of Travis County and Hays County. New construction remains active in the northwest and northeast growth corridors, with builders like Brohn Homes delivering product in communities along the 1604 loop. For buyers willing to consider the broader region, Austin area homes for sale provide a useful benchmark for understanding how the two markets compare.
Getting Around San Antonio
San Antonio's highway system is organized around two concentric loops: Loop 410 forms the inner ring, and Loop 1604 defines the outer suburban boundary. From those loops, major spokes radiate outward including IH-10 (west toward El Paso and east toward Houston), IH-35 (north toward Austin and south toward Laredo), IH-37 (south toward Corpus Christi), and US-281 (north toward Johnson City and the Hill Country). Most suburban commutes happen entirely within this grid, and drive times from neighborhoods along 1604 to downtown San Antonio typically run 20 to 30 minutes outside of peak hours.
The Austin commute runs along IH-35 north through San Marcos, Kyle, and Buda before entering the Austin metro, covering roughly 80 miles. Travel time varies from around 90 minutes under light traffic to well over two hours during peak commute windows. Buyers who drive this corridor regularly tend to factor it heavily into their neighborhood decision, often prioritizing communities on the north side of San Antonio near Selma or along the 281 corridor. There is no commuter rail connecting the two cities, so the drive is the primary option.
Within San Antonio, the VIA Metropolitan Transit system provides bus service across the city, though most residents rely on personal vehicles for daily movement given the city's size and suburban density.
Living in San Antonio
San Antonio has a cultural identity unlike any other Texas city. The Riverwalk runs through downtown with restaurants, hotels, and tourist activity, but the city's real residential character lives in its neighborhoods. Southtown and the King William Historic District offer walkable streets, independent dining, and a strong arts presence. The Pearl, a redeveloped brewery complex on the Museum Reach of the River Walk, anchors the city's most energetic food and retail scene, with a weekly farmers market, nationally recognized restaurants, and boutique hotel rooms that were once malt tanks.
Stone Oak in the north is a different world: polished suburban development with medical corridor access, retail density along US-281, and newer construction throughout. Buyers looking for outdoor recreation will find Eisenhower Park, Government Canyon State Natural Area, and the Mission Reach trail system all within the city or its immediate surroundings. Medina Lake sits about 30 miles to the northwest, and the Texas Hill Country begins just beyond Helotes and Fair Oaks Ranch.
San Antonio's economy is anchored by a substantial military presence across Fort Sam Houston, Lackland Air Force Base, and Randolph Air Force Base, along with one of the largest healthcare ecosystems in South Texas. That employment base creates consistent housing demand across a wide range of price points and keeps the market from becoming too narrowly dependent on any single sector.
Neuhaus Realty Group works with buyers and sellers across San Antonio and the Hill Country communities stretching between San Antonio and Austin. If you are weighing a move between the two metros or exploring the communities along IH-35, we can help you understand how each market compares and where your priorities best align.
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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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