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Thousand Oaks, TX Real Estate
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Thousand Oaks is a quiet, acreage-oriented community tucked into Bastrop County, east of Austin along the piney woods corridor that gives this part of Texas its distinct character. Properties here tend to sit on generous lots, offering the kind of breathing room and privacy that buyers increasingly find hard to come by closer to the city. The area draws people who want a genuine rural lifestyle without completely disconnecting from the Austin metro, and the presence of the Cedar Creek school corridor adds a layer of appeal for households prioritizing a smaller-district feel over the scale of larger suburban campuses. Neighborhoods | Schools | Market Overview | Getting Around | Lifestyle | FAQs
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About Thousand Oaks, TX Real Estate
Neighborhoods & Subdivisions in Thousand Oaks
The Thousand Oaks community in Bastrop County is organized across a handful of subdivisions that share the same rural personality while offering some variation in lot size and development vintage. The core Thousand Oaks subdivision anchors the area with the most inventory and tends to feature some of the larger residential footprints in the community. Thousand Oaks Sec 1 and Thousand Oaks Sec 2 round out the platted sections, with Sec 2 occasionally offering raw land parcels for buyers who want to build from the ground up rather than purchase an existing home.
The land component of the market here is not incidental. A meaningful share of what changes hands in Thousand Oaks is raw acreage, which means buyers browsing the area should come in knowing whether they want a finished residence or are open to the project of building one. For those searching across the broader Austin area homes for sale, Thousand Oaks represents one of the more attainable entry points into genuine acreage living within reasonable reach of the metro.
Schools in Thousand Oaks
Thousand Oaks sits primarily within Bastrop ISD, which serves a wide stretch of Bastrop County and operates several campuses relevant to residents here. At the elementary level, Cedar Creek Elementary is one of the schools serving this corridor, feeding into Cedar Creek Middle School and Cedar Creek High School. Carver Elementary and Travis Elementary are also part of the Bastrop ISD network for this portion of the county.
At the secondary level, Bastrop High School and Cedar Creek High School are the two main options within the district, each with its own programs and extracurriculars. Bastrop ISD is a mid-sized district with a more personal scale than the massive suburban districts closer to Austin, which some buyers specifically seek out. The district's footprint across Bastrop County means school assignment can vary depending on exact property location, so buyers should verify attendance zones directly with Bastrop ISD when evaluating specific addresses.
The school data also shows overlap with Burnet CISD, Georgetown ISD, and San Marcos CISD for certain parcels in the area, which is not unusual for unincorporated Bastrop County properties near county boundaries. Again, confirming the actual assigned campus for a given address is always the right move before making decisions based on school zoning.
Real Estate Market Overview
Thousand Oaks in Bastrop County functions as a land-and-residential hybrid market, which sets it apart from purely residential neighborhoods closer to Austin. Buyers here are choosing between finished homes, acreage lots ready for custom construction, and the occasional rental residence. The residential homes that do trade in the area tend to sit on lot sizes well above what you would find in a typical suburban subdivision, with average acreage per property running over five acres. That land component meaningfully shapes how the market behaves and how buyers should approach their search.
Pricing in Thousand Oaks reflects its rural character and Bastrop County location, sitting below what comparable acreage would cost in Travis or Hays County while still offering genuine proximity to Austin's eastern employment corridors. The market here moves at a slower pace than competitive urban submarkets, which can work in a buyer's favor when it comes to negotiation and due diligence timelines. Neuhaus Realty Group has experience working across Bastrop County and can help buyers understand how acreage purchases differ from standard residential transactions, particularly around well, septic, and survey requirements.
Getting Around Thousand Oaks
Thousand Oaks sits in the eastern part of Bastrop County, and residents rely primarily on SH-71 and US-290 to connect with Austin and the broader metro. The drive into downtown Austin typically runs 45 to 60 minutes depending on traffic and the exact point of origin within the community, making it a genuine commute rather than a quick hop. That distance is part of the trade-off buyers are making when they choose this area: more land and more quiet in exchange for a longer drive to urban employment centers.
The community of Cedar Creek is the closest commercial hub, offering grocery access, dining, and everyday services without requiring the full drive into Bastrop proper or Austin. Bastrop itself is a short drive and has a growing downtown with restaurants, shops, and the kind of small-city character that draws buyers who want amenity access without urban density. Austin-Bergstrom International Airport is also notably closer from Thousand Oaks than from many northwest Austin suburbs, which matters for buyers who travel frequently.
Lifestyle in Thousand Oaks
Life in Thousand Oaks is defined by space, trees, and a slower pace. Bastrop County's famous Lost Pines ecosystem, a westward extension of the Piney Woods, gives this area a landscape unlike anything in the Hill Country or the central city. Properties here back up to or abut stretches of land with mature loblolly pines, creating a wooded atmosphere that buyers from outside Texas often find surprising and immediately appealing.
Bastrop State Park, one of the most visited state parks in Texas, sits a short drive from the community and offers hiking, camping, fishing on Lake Bastrop, and access to the unique Lost Pines terrain. The Bastrop community also supports a local arts scene, farmers markets, and a historic downtown that has seen steady reinvestment over the past decade. For buyers who want outdoor access, natural character, and a community with its own identity rather than a satellite of Austin, Thousand Oaks and the surrounding Bastrop County area deliver.
Buyers comparing Thousand Oaks against other eastern Bastrop County communities should spend time in Cedar Creek, which shares similar school options and acreage character with a slightly different geographic footprint. Both areas reward buyers who prioritize land and lifestyle over proximity to urban cores.
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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