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The Hill, Austin TX Real Estate
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The Hill is a quietly established Austin neighborhood tucked into the heart of central Travis County, where mature trees shade older lots and the bones of mid-century Austin are still very much intact. Served by Austin ISD, with Ridgetop Elementary, Lamar Middle School, and McCallum High School rounding out the feeder pattern, the area draws buyers who want real Austin character rather than a polished subdivision. Lot sizes here run generous by inner-city standards, and the mix of residential, land, and the occasional commercial parcel gives the area a layered, evolving feel that appeals to buyers looking for something with a little more texture. If you want walkable access to the city's core with elbow room that is hard to find this close in, The Hill deserves a closer look. Neighborhoods | Schools | Market Overview | Getting Around | Lifestyle | FAQs
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About The Hill, Austin TX Real Estate
Neighborhoods & Subdivisions in The Hill
The Hill is a compact, low-turnover neighborhood in central Austin with two primary subdivision designations that show up in MLS data: Hill and The Hill. Both refer to the same pocket of Travis County and share the same essential character. Homes here tend to sit on lots that are notably larger than what you find in comparable central Austin neighborhoods, giving properties a sense of space and privacy that is increasingly rare this close to downtown. The housing stock skews older, with mid-century ranch-style homes alongside updated cottages and the occasional newer infill build. Buyers looking for land opportunities or light commercial potential will also find parcels that come to market periodically, making this one of the more versatile small neighborhoods in the Austin ISD footprint.
Because The Hill is small and moves slowly, inventory is almost always limited. That scarcity is part of what gives the neighborhood its appeal. Homes here rarely come up twice, so buyers who know the area tend to act decisively when something becomes available. If you are browsing the broader Austin area homes for sale, The Hill is worth bookmarking even before active listings appear.
Schools in The Hill
The Hill falls entirely within Austin Independent School District, one of the largest and most academically varied urban school districts in Texas. The neighborhood's feeder pattern runs through three campuses that are well regarded within AISD.
Ridgetop Elementary serves the youngest residents and carries a reputation for strong parent involvement and a tight-knit campus community. Lamar Middle School (Austin ISD) offers a range of academic programs and connects students to a broader peer group as they move into the secondary years. At the high school level, students attend McCallum High School, home to the nationally recognized Fine Arts Academy. McCallum draws students with interests in visual art, theatre, orchestra, band, and dance, and its magnet programs attract applicants from well outside the immediate attendance zone. For buyers who value arts-integrated education alongside strong academics, McCallum is a genuine differentiator.
Private school options in central Austin are also within easy reach, with several independent and parochial campuses accessible via major corridors for families who want to explore outside the public system.
Real Estate Market Overview
The Hill is a low-volume, high-interest neighborhood. Because it is small, closed sales in any given year represent a thin slice of Austin's overall market, but that limited supply is precisely what creates sustained buyer interest. Homes that surface here are rarely cookie-cutter. You are more likely to encounter an updated ranch with a detached studio, a deep lot with development potential, or a meticulously maintained mid-century home than a standard production build.
Buyers should approach The Hill with patience and preparation. Listings can sit longer than the city average, particularly for land and commercial parcels that require a buyer with a specific vision. Residential homes in move-in condition tend to generate more immediate interest. Working with an agent at Neuhaus Realty Group who monitors the neighborhood closely can mean the difference between being ready when something comes up versus scrambling after it is already under contract.
Qualitatively, The Hill occupies a mid-to-upper range within the central Austin market. Its proximity to the urban core, generous lots, and Austin ISD feeder pattern all support pricing that reflects genuine scarcity rather than speculative momentum. Buyers can also find land and commercial opportunities that are exceedingly rare in this part of the city.
Getting Around The Hill
One of the most practical advantages of The Hill is its position in central Travis County. Residents are well within reach of downtown Austin without the congestion premium of living in the urban core itself. The drive to downtown Austin typically runs under 15 minutes outside of peak commute windows, and several major arterials, including Lamar Boulevard, Burnet Road, and North Loop, give residents multiple routing options to reach employers, entertainment districts, and UT Austin's campus.
The neighborhood is also reasonably bikeable by Austin standards. Lamar and Burnet both have dedicated infrastructure, and the broader North Central Austin grid connects The Hill to Hyde Park, the Triangle, and North Loop's commercial corridor without requiring a car for everyday errands. Capital Metro bus service runs through multiple nearby corridors, and the proximity to future transit development on the Lamar corridor is worth tracking for buyers thinking long-term about transportation.
For Austin residents comparing options, The Hill competes well with neighboring communities across central Austin. Buyers drawn to the Austin ISD feeder pattern or the McCallum Fine Arts pipeline should also look at nearby North Austin pockets that share similar access, walkability, and lot characteristics.
Lifestyle in The Hill
Living in The Hill means being plugged into the version of Austin that longtime residents actually mean when they talk about the city. The North Loop commercial district is close, bringing independent coffee shops, record stores, vintage furniture dealers, and a rotating cast of chef-driven restaurants that reflect the neighborhood's creative undercurrent. Burnet Road's dining and retail corridor is similarly accessible, with everything from wine bars to barbecue joints within a short drive or bike ride.
Green space is woven through the surrounding area. Brentwood Park, Ramsey Park, and the broader Shoal Creek trail network all sit within a reasonable radius, offering jogging paths, disc golf, and creek-side walks without leaving the neighborhood's orbit. The density of mature trees throughout central Austin means that even mid-summer heat is tempered by genuine canopy cover in ways that newer suburban developments simply cannot replicate.
The housing mix in The Hill also supports a range of uses. Buyers interested in live-work arrangements, rental income from accessory dwelling units, or simply having a larger lot in a central location will find that The Hill offers configurations that are increasingly scarce in Austin's interior. Land parcels that come to market here represent some of the rarest infill opportunities in the city.
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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