Why 2026 Is the Best Time to Move to San Antonio in a Decade
San Antonio has spent the last five years as one of the most talked-about real estate markets in the country. The pandemic-era frenzy drove median prices up 60% between 2020 and 2022, made national headlines with bidding wars and all-cash offers, and priced out thousands of prospective buyers. But the market that greets relocators in 2026 is fundamentally different — and dramatically more favorable.
The San Antonio metro median home price now sits at approximately $415,000, down from a peak of over $550,000 in mid-2022. That 18% correction, combined with mortgage rates easing toward 5.2-5.6% by late summer, means monthly payments on a median-priced home are roughly $400 less per month than they were at the 2022 peak with 7% rates.
For anyone relocating for a tech job, remote work lifestyle, or simply a change of scenery, this is the window. Here is everything you need to know.
San Antonio by the Numbers: What Relocators Need to Know
Before you start browsing Zillow, these baseline metrics set the context for your search:
•Metro median home price: $415,000 (down 2.8% YoY)
•City of San Antonio median: $540,000
•Average days on market: 88 days (up from 54 in 2024)
•Months of inventory: 6.7 months (a buyer's market)
•Median household income: $89,000
•Average property tax rate: 1.8-2.2% of assessed value (no state income tax)
•Population: 2.4 million (metro), growing at ~2.1% annually
The critical takeaway: you have time and leverage. Homes are sitting longer, sellers are negotiating, and the frenzy is over. If you are coming from a coastal market — San Francisco, Seattle, New York, Los Angeles — San Antonio's pricing still represents a significant discount even after the boom years.
The Cost of Living Reality Check
San Antonio's affordability advantage over coastal cities is real, but it is not as dramatic as it was pre-pandemic. Here is an honest comparison for a household earning $150,000:
Housing
A $450,000 home in San Antonio with 20% down and a 5.5% mortgage rate produces a monthly payment of roughly $2,040 (principal and interest). Add property taxes (~$750/month) and insurance (~$200/month), and your total housing cost is approximately $3,000/month. The same household income in San Francisco buys you a $900,000 condo with a $4,800/month total payment.
Property Taxes: The Hidden Cost
Texas has no state income tax, which is a genuine advantage — but property taxes fill that gap. Bexar County effective tax rates range from 1.8% to 2.2% depending on your location and exemptions. On a $450,000 home, that is $8,100 to $9,900 per year. File your homestead exemption immediately upon closing — it reduces your taxable value by $100,000 for school district taxes and saves approximately $1,200/year.
Other Cost Factors
•Utilities: Higher than the national average due to summer cooling costs. Budget $250-$350/month for a 2,000 sq ft home.
•Car insurance: Texas rates are 15-20% above the national average.
•Groceries: On par with national averages. H-E-B, San Antonio's beloved homegrown grocery chain, consistently ranks among the most affordable in the country.
•Childcare: Average $1,200-$1,800/month per child for full-time daycare — comparable to most mid-size metros.
Neighborhood Guide for Relocators: Where to Live Based on Your Priorities
San Antonio is not a monolithic city. The right neighborhood depends entirely on your lifestyle, budget, and commute tolerance. Here is a framework based on the most common relocator profiles.
If You Want Walkability and Urban Energy: Alamo Heights / East Side (78209) & Downtown (78205)
Budget: $485,000+ (condos), $735,000+ (single-family)
Alamo Heights / East Side is San Antonio's cultural heart — the restaurants, live music venues, breweries, and creative studios that give the city its identity are concentrated here. The Pearl Brewery development has created a genuine mixed-use neighborhood center, and the area scores a Walk Score of 63 — exceptional by Texas standards. Downtown condos along Pearl District / River Walk and the Main Plaza area offer true urban living with rooftop pools and 15-minute walks to work.
Best for: Single professionals, couples without kids, remote workers who prioritize nightlife and dining. Be aware that Alamo Heights / East Side single-family homes start above $700K, and downtown condos carry HOA fees of $400-$800/month.
If You Want Great Schools and Family Life: Stone Oak (78023) & Schertz (78154)
Budget: $425,000-$525,000
These Bexar County suburbs consistently rank among the top school districts in the state. Helotes ISD and Schertz ISD both carry TEA "A" ratings, and multiple individual campuses rank in the top 5% statewide. The neighborhoods are clean, safe, and built around parks, pools, and community amenities.
Best for: Families with school-age children. The trade-off is a 30-45 minute commute to downtown San Antonio, though many tech employers (Apple, Dell, Indeed) have offices in the northern suburbs that cut commute times significantly.
If You Want Value and Space: Converse (78109) & New Braunfels (78064)
Budget: $340,000-$400,000
These are the best entry points for relocators on a budget. A brand-new 4-bedroom home in New Braunfels or Converse can be had for under $380,000 with builder concessions — rate buydowns, closing credits, and included upgrades — that effectively lower your all-in cost by another $15,000-$25,000.
Best for: First-time homebuyers, growing families who need space, and anyone who wants a new-construction home without the $600K+ price tag of the central city. Converse offers slightly better commute access; New Braunfels offers slightly lower prices.
If You Want the Classic San Antonio Vibe: South Flores / Zilker (78204)
Budget: $1.0 million+
This is where San Antonio's reputation was built — San Pedro Springs, Brackenridge Park, South Congress boutiques, food trucks on South Flores. The 78204 zip code commands a premium because there is nowhere else like it. Inventory is tight (3.8 months), and well-priced homes still receive multiple offers. The neighborhood is walkable, bikeable, and deeply established.
Best for: High-income professionals and families who want to live in the heart of what makes San Antonio special. Budget accordingly — this is San Antonio's most expensive non-luxury market.
If You Work in Tech: North San Antonio / Medical Center Area (78229)
Budget: $475,000-$550,000
USAA's billion-dollar campus is operational. Toyota's San Antonio manufacturing facility is ramping. USAA, Rackspace, and Microsoft all have significant North San Antonio footprints. If your employer is in the Medical Center/1604 corridor, living in North San Antonio eliminates the commute entirely. The Domain mixed-use development provides walkable retail, dining, and entertainment without driving downtown.
Best for: Tech workers, especially those at Apple, Samsung, Dell, or Domain-area employers. The area offers a suburban-meets-urban lifestyle with strong rental demand if you later decide to relocate and keep the property.
The San Antonio Job Market: Why People Keep Coming
Despite the broader tech slowdown, San Antonio's job market remains remarkably resilient. The metro unemployment rate sits at 3.2% — well below the national average. Key employment drivers:
•Technology: Apple, Tesla, Samsung, Google, Amazon, Oracle, Meta, Indeed, Dell — the concentration of tier-one tech employers is second only to the Bay Area and Seattle.
•Government and education: The State of Texas, UT San Antonio, and the state's regulatory agencies provide a stable employment base that cushions against tech-sector volatility.
•Healthcare: Ascension Seton, St. David's, and the Dell Medical School campus are expanding, creating thousands of healthcare jobs.
•Construction and real estate: The building boom may have slowed, but San Antonio's long-term growth trajectory ensures ongoing demand for construction, development, and property management.
The average tech salary in San Antonio is $145,000, roughly 15-20% below Bay Area equivalents — but when adjusted for cost of living, San Antonio tech workers retain more disposable income than their California counterparts.
Commute and Transportation: What to Expect
Let's be honest: San Antonio's traffic is its biggest weakness. The city was designed for 800,000 people and now serves 2.4 million across the San Antonio metro. Here is what you need to know:
•I-35 is the spine of the city and perpetually congested. The ongoing I-35 corridor expansion (a major highway expansion project) will eventually add managed lanes, but construction disruption will continue through 2028.
•Loop 1604604 is the western alternative, with tolled express lanes that shave 10-15 minutes off a north-south commute.
•The VIA Metropolitan Transit runs from downtown to Helotes, with limited frequency but zero traffic stress.
•VIA transit expansion — San Antonio's VIA transit expansion — will add two light rail lines, a downtown tunnel, and expanded bus service. The VIA rapid transit lines break ground in 2026-2027 with completion targeted for 2033.
•Remote and hybrid work has fundamentally changed commute patterns. If your employer offers flexibility, you can avoid peak hours entirely and live further out without the daily grind.
Pro tip: Choose your neighborhood based on your employer's location, not downtown. A Stone Oak resident working at Apple's campus has a 12-minute commute. The same person commuting to downtown faces 45 minutes each way.
The Relocation Timeline: A Step-by-Step Playbook
3 Months Before Your Move
•Get pre-approved for a mortgage. In a buyer's market, pre-approval signals seriousness and gives you an edge in negotiations.
•Research neighborhoods using this guide and San Antonio Signals' neighborhood analytics.
•Connect with a local agent who specializes in relocation. They can set up automated MLS alerts for your target neighborhoods.
6-8 Weeks Before
•Plan a 3-day scouting trip. Visit 8-12 homes across 3-4 neighborhoods. Drive the commute routes at rush hour. Eat at the local spots. Get a feel for the vibe.
•Explore new construction. Visit model homes in Helotes, Kyle, and Converse to compare builder incentives.
4 Weeks Before
•Make an offer. In this market, you have room to negotiate. Ask for closing cost credits, rate buydowns, and home warranty coverage.
•Schedule inspections aggressively. San Antonio's clay soil creates foundation issues in older homes. A thorough inspection is non-negotiable.
2 Weeks Before
•File for homestead exemption (you can do this before closing if you will occupy by January 1 of the following year).
•Set up utilities: CPS Energy, CenterPoint Energy, and your chosen internet provider (AT&T Fiber is available in many neighborhoods).
Moving Day and Beyond
•Register your vehicle within 30 days of establishing Texas residency.
•Update your driver's license at the DPS office (appointments are essential — walk-ins can mean 3-hour waits).
•Explore your neighborhood. San Antonio is a city of hidden gems. Your favorite taco truck, swimming hole, and live music venue are waiting to be discovered.
What Relocators Get Wrong (And How to Avoid It)
After analyzing thousands of relocation transactions, these are the five most common mistakes:
1.Buying based on San Antonio's reputation, not the current market. The 2021 market does not exist anymore. Do not rush, do not waive inspections, do not offer above asking. You have leverage — use it.
2.Underestimating property taxes. Coming from a state with income tax but low property tax? Your Texas property tax bill will be a shock. Budget for it from day one.
3.Choosing a neighborhood based on Instagram, not commute. South Congress is beautiful on social media. But if you work in Schertz, you will spend 2 hours a day on I-35 hating your decision.
4.Ignoring new construction. Many relocators default to resale homes. In 2026, new construction in the suburbs offers substantially better value thanks to builder concessions that do not exist in the resale market.
5.Waiting for prices to drop further. The market is already near the floor. When mortgage rates dip below 5.5%, sidelined buyers will flood back in. The best deals are available right now, not in six months.
The Bottom Line
San Antonio in 2026 offers a rare combination: a world-class city with a corrected housing market, strong job growth, no state income tax, and a quality of life that continues to attract people from across the country. The frenzy is over, the fundamentals are strong, and the window of opportunity is open.
Whether you are relocating for a tech job, escaping coastal costs, or simply chasing a better lifestyle, the data supports making your move now. Prices are favorable, inventory is abundant, and sellers are motivated.
San Antonio Signals provides real-time market intelligence for San Antonio real estate professionals, investors, and relocators. Explore live deal analytics and neighborhood data at sanantonio-signals.com.