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Market IntelligenceMarch 30, 2026· 8 min read

Spring 2026 San Antonio Neighborhood Guide: Where Smart Money Is Moving Now

From Alamo Heights / East Side's creative corridor to the booming suburbs of Boerne, we analyze price-per-square-foot, days on market, and appreciation forecasts for 12 key San Antonio neighborhoods. Data-backed picks for buyers, sellers, and investors this spring.

Spring 2026 San Antonio Neighborhood Guide: Where Smart Money Is Moving Now

San Antonio's real estate market has entered a new chapter. After years of pandemic-fueled frenzy and a subsequent correction that shaved nearly 18% off peak metro prices, 2026 is shaping up as a year of strategic opportunity. But in a city as geographically diverse as San Antonio, the headline numbers only tell part of the story. The real alpha is in the neighborhoods.

This guide breaks down 12 key San Antonio submarkets using the latest Q1 2026 data from the San Antonio Board of REALTORS, Zillow Home Value Index, and TRERC. Whether you are a first-time buyer hunting value, a seller timing your listing, or an investor looking for cash-flow plays, the neighborhood-level data will sharpen your strategy.


Central San Antonio: Premium Holds, But Negotiation Power Shifts

Monte Vista & Old West San Antonio

Median price: $1.42M | Days on market: 78 | YoY change: -2.1%

Monte Vista remains one of the most coveted addresses in Texas. Tree-lined streets, proximity to Medina Lake, and top-rated Casis Elementary keep demand resilient among high-income families. However, the shift to a buyer's market has introduced something foreign to this zip code: negotiating power. Homes that sat at $1.6M in 2022 are now trading at $1.4M with seller concessions becoming standard. For buyers who have been priced out of the 78212 zip code, this spring offers the best entry point since 2019.

Monte Vista & Tobin Hill

Median price: $875K | Days on market: 62 | YoY change: -4.3%

Monte Vista's walkability and restaurant scene continue to draw young professionals and downsizers. The condo market here has softened more than single-family, with new construction competing aggressively on price. Investors should note that rental yields in the Tobin Hill corridor have improved as purchase prices have dropped faster than rents, pushing cap rates toward 5.2% — the highest since 2017.


Alamo Heights / East Side: The Creative Corridor Matures

Holly & East Cesar Chavez (78209)

Median price: $685K | Days on market: 55 | YoY change: -5.8%

Alamo Heights / East Side's transformation from San Antonio's best-kept secret to a nationally recognized creative hub is well documented. What the 2026 data shows is a market finding equilibrium. The frenzied flipping activity of 2021-2022 has cooled, replaced by more intentional owner-occupant purchases. The 55-day average on market — down from 72 days in late 2025 — signals that the correction may be stabilizing. For buyers who value culture, walkability, and proximity to downtown, 78209 remains a compelling long-term bet.

Mueller & Windsor Park (78216)

Median price: $485K | Days on market: 48 | YoY change: -1.2%

Mueller is one of San Antonio's most successful planned communities, and its market data reflects relative stability. The neighborhood's mix of single-family homes, townhomes, and condos provides a natural hedge against volatility. Windsor Park, adjacent to Mueller, offers even more value with older ranch-style homes in the $420K-$460K range — a genuine entry point for families who want to live inside the city limits.


Southtown / South San Antonio: Lifestyle Premium Meets Reality

South Alamo / Southtown & Travis Heights

Median price: $925K | Days on market: 69 | YoY change: -3.7%

SoCo's brand cachet keeps it among San Antonio's most desirable neighborhoods, but the market has cooled from its 2022 highs. The primary driver is inventory: new listings are up 22% year-over-year, giving buyers choices that simply did not exist two years ago. Travis Heights, with its mix of mid-century bungalows and new construction, is seeing particular activity from remote workers relocating from the West Coast who view $900K as a relative bargain compared to San Francisco or LA.

South Manchaca & Garrison Park

Median price: $395K | Days on market: 42 | YoY change: +1.4%

This is one of the few San Antonio neighborhoods showing positive year-over-year price growth, and the reason is straightforward: affordability. With a median under $400K, South Manchaca attracts first-time buyers who have been pushed out of trendier south San Antonio neighborhoods. The area's proximity to Loop 1604604 and growing retail along Manchaca Road are additional tailwinds. Investors should pay attention — rental demand here is strong, with two-bedroom homes commanding $1,800-$2,100/month.


North San Antonio: The Tech Corridor Recalibrates

The Domain & North Burnet

Median price: $445K | Days on market: 71 | YoY change: -6.2%

The Domain area has been one of the most impacted submarkets in the correction. Heavy condo construction combined with tech layoffs at companies like Meta and Intel created a double headwind. The good news for buyers: there are genuine deals to be found. One-bedroom condos near The Domain that peaked at $380K in 2022 are now available at $285K-$310K. For investors, the rental market remains healthy — proximity to Apple, Amazon, and Google campuses ensures consistent tenant demand.

Stone Oak & Helotes

Median price: $425K | Days on market: 58 | YoY change: -2.8%

The Bexar County suburbs continue to be the growth story of the San Antonio metro. Stone Oak's combination of excellent schools (Helotes ISD), new retail development, and relative affordability makes it the default choice for families with children. The $425K median buys significantly more square footage than anything comparable inside San Antonio city limits — typically 2,200-2,600 sq ft of newer construction with a two-car garage. New home communities from builders like Taylor Morrison and Meritage are offering $15K-$25K in incentives, creating additional buyer leverage.


The Western Arc: Texas Hill Country Lifestyle, Growing Accessibility

Boerne & Fair Oaks Ranch

Median price: $615K | Days on market: 84 | YoY change: -1.9%

Boerne has been one of San Antonio's fastest-growing suburbs over the past five years, and while the pace has moderated, the lifestyle appeal remains strong. The Texas Hill Country setting, boutique wineries, and expanding restaurant scene attract a specific buyer profile: established professionals and early retirees seeking space and scenery. Inventory here is elevated, with 7.8 months of supply, giving buyers significant negotiating leverage. Properties with acreage (1-5 acres) are seeing the steepest discounts, with some sellers accepting 10-12% below original list price.

Lakeway & The Hills

Median price: $725K | Days on market: 92 | YoY change: -4.1%

Lakeway's luxury-oriented market has experienced a sharper correction than the San Antonio metro average. The 92-day average time on market is the highest of any established San Antonio-area neighborhood. However, for buyers attracted to Lake Travis access, golf communities, and the Lake Travis ISD school district, the current environment offers exceptional value. Homes that would have commanded $850K in 2022 are trading at $700K-$740K with seller-paid closing costs.


The Opportunity Map: Where the Data Points

Based on our analysis of Q1 2026 data across all 12 neighborhoods, here are the key takeaways for each buyer type:

First-Time Buyers (Budget: $350K-$500K)

Best bets: South Manchaca, Mueller/Windsor Park, Stone Oak

These neighborhoods combine affordability with quality schools, growing amenities, and relative price stability

Target homes that have been on market 45+ days for maximum negotiation leverage

Move-Up Buyers (Budget: $500K-$900K)

Best bets: East Cesar Chavez (78209), Boerne, North Burnet condos

The correction has brought aspirational neighborhoods within reach for the first time in years

Look for seller concessions: rate buydowns, closing cost credits, and home warranty inclusions are now standard

Investors (Cash-Flow Focus)

Best bets: West Campus rentals, South Manchaca single-family rentals, Domain-area condos

Cap rates have improved across the board as purchase prices have fallen faster than rents

The strongest rental demand corridors: UT campus proximity, tech employer proximity, and highway accessibility

Sellers (Timing Your Listing)

Price realistically from day one — the data shows that homes priced within 3% of market value sell in 38 days on average, while overpriced homes linger for 90+ days

Spring 2026 is showing early signs of seasonal demand pickup; listing before mid-April positions you ahead of the summer inventory wave

Professional staging and photography are no longer optional — they are the minimum standard in a market with abundant choice


The Macro View: What Happens Next

Three forces will shape San Antonio's trajectory through the rest of 2026:

1.Interest rates: The Federal Reserve is widely expected to continue its easing cycle, with mortgage rates projected to reach 5.0-5.6% by year-end. Every quarter-point drop adds approximately $30K in purchasing power for the median buyer, which could provide a floor under prices.

2.Job growth: Despite headline tech layoffs, San Antonio added 28,000 net new jobs in the trailing 12 months. The city's economic base is diversifying beyond tech into healthcare, defense, clean energy, and advanced manufacturing. Samsung's $17B fab in Taylor and Tesla's continued expansion in Southeast Bexar County are generational investments.

3.Population growth: San Antonio's metro population grew by 2.3% in 2025, down from the 4.5% peak in 2021-2022 but still well above the national average. Sustained in-migration from California, the Northeast, and the Midwest provides a structural demand floor that most secondary markets lack.

The consensus among analysts — TRERC, Zillow, and Redfin — is that the floor is in for San Antonio pricing. Further declines of more than 2-3% from current levels are unlikely given employment strength and projected rate relief. The question is not whether the market will recover, but how quickly.


The Bottom Line

San Antonio in spring 2026 is a market of opportunity for those who do their homework. The days of blind bidding wars are gone, replaced by a data-driven landscape where neighborhood selection, pricing strategy, and timing matter more than ever. The 12 neighborhoods profiled here span the full spectrum of price, lifestyle, and investment potential.

The smart money is not waiting for a market bottom — it is recognizing that the conditions for favorable purchases already exist. Inventory is abundant, sellers are motivated, rates are trending down, and San Antonio's long-term growth story remains intact.


San Antonio Signals delivers real-time market intelligence, off-market deal alerts, and neighborhood analytics for San Antonio real estate professionals and investors. Explore live data at sanantonio-signals.com.

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