Pearland Neighborhoods Compared: A Local’s Guide to Buying in Houston’s #1 Suburb

Pearland Neighborhoods Compared: A Local’s Guide to Buying in Houston’s #1 Suburb
Houston · Pearland · May 2026

Pearland Neighborhoods Compared: A Local’s Guide to Buying in Houston’s #1 Suburb

Pearland is the suburb people move to when they want Houston access without Houston traffic, school options without private school tuition, and yard space without losing the 25-minute commute to the Medical Center. It’s also the most-misunderstood market in the metro — because “Pearland” isn’t one neighborhood. It’s a dozen, spread across two counties and three school districts, with prices that swing from the high $200s to well over a million depending on which street you’re on.

I work this market every week. I live 15 minutes away. This guide breaks down the seven sub-areas most of my clients are choosing between, what each one is actually like, and who fits where. Use it to narrow your search before you start touring — because nothing wastes a Saturday like driving to four open houses in the wrong corner of Pearland.

Read This First

Pearland Is Two Counties and Three School Districts

Most of Pearland sits in Brazoria County. A northern slice sits in Harris County. Schools are split between Pearland ISD, Alvin ISD, and a small portion of Fort Bend ISD — and the line between them does not follow city boundaries.
The street you choose determines which county taxes you, which appraisal district sets your value, and which school district your kids attend. Two homes a half-mile apart can have very different tax bills and very different elementary zones. Verify before you fall in love.
Why Pearland

The Numbers Behind the Move

Pearland has been one of the fastest-growing cities in Texas for a decade running, and the math is not complicated. It sits directly south of Houston along Highway 288, putting the Texas Medical Center, downtown, and the Galleria all inside a 30-minute drive in normal traffic. Pearland ISD consistently ranks among the top public school districts in the Houston metro. Property is meaningfully more affordable than the inner loop. And the city has been deliberate about retail, dining, and parks — this is not a bedroom community.

Metric Pearland
Population~130,000
CountiesBrazoria (majority), Harris (north slice)
School districtsPearland ISD, Alvin ISD, Fort Bend ISD
Drive to Texas Medical Center20–30 min via Hwy 288
Drive to Downtown Houston25–35 min via Hwy 288
Median sale price (early 2026)~$385,000 (varies widely by sub-area)

The growth has been mostly westward and southward, into newer master-planned communities. Older Pearland — the original townsite east of Highway 35 — remains the most affordable entry point and has its own loyalists. The seven neighborhoods below cover roughly 90% of the homes my clients end up looking at.

The Neighborhoods

Seven Sub-Areas, Seven Different Trade-Offs

Neighborhood 1

Shadow Creek Ranch

West of Hwy 288 · Mostly Alvin ISD · Approx. $350K–$700K+
The biggest, best-known master-planned community in Pearland. Lakes, miles of trails, multiple amenity centers, and a large lake-centered park. Homes range from townhomes to half-million-plus custom builds. Strong family demographic, well-funded HOA, and quick access to Hwy 288. Note that most of Shadow Creek Ranch is in Alvin ISD, not Pearland ISD — verify the school zone before you commit.
Neighborhood 2

Silverlake

East of Hwy 288 · Pearland ISD · Approx. $300K–$500K
Established master-planned community with mature trees, a more settled feel than Shadow Creek, and direct access to Pearland ISD’s top elementary zones. Lakes, pools, tennis, and the Pearland Recreation Center are all within walking distance for many sections. A favorite for families who want master-planned amenities without paying new-construction premiums.
Neighborhood 3

Old Pearland (Original Townsite)

East of Hwy 35 · Pearland ISD · Approx. $250K–$400K
The most affordable entry point in the city. Smaller, older homes — mostly 1960s through 1980s — on larger lots than newer builds. Many sections have no HOA, which means more freedom and lower monthly carrying costs but more variation in upkeep house-to-house. Best for first-time buyers, investors, and anyone who values lot size and lack of HOA over new-construction polish.
Neighborhood 4

Southern Trails

South of FM 518 · Pearland ISD · Approx. $400K–$700K
Master-planned, family-focused, with a strong amenity package and tree-lined streets. Homes are predominantly 2010s and newer, two-story, four to five bedrooms. Less central than Silverlake but newer build quality and more square footage per dollar. The southern location adds a few minutes to a TMC commute compared to Silverlake or Shadow Creek.
Neighborhood 5

Sunset Ranch & West Pearland New Builds

Far west · Mix of Alvin ISD and Fort Bend ISD · Approx. $400K–$900K+
The current growth frontier. New-construction subdivisions are still being delivered here, with builder incentives that often beat anything in the resale market on a price-per-square-foot basis. Trade-off is a longer commute and the standard new-build risks — punch-list quality, MUD tax exposure, drainage on newly developed land. A great fit for buyers who prioritize new construction and don’t mind a 35-minute drive to TMC.
Neighborhood 6

The Lakes at Country Place

Central Pearland · Pearland ISD · Approx. $300K–$550K
Built around the Country Place golf course. Mature subdivision with consistent architecture, wide streets, and a slightly older demographic than the newer master-planned communities. A favorite for downsizers, golfers, and second-home buyers. Quiet, walkable in sections, and close to the Pearland Town Center.
Neighborhood 7

Riverstone Ranch & Far East Pearland

East of Hwy 35 · Pearland ISD · Approx. $350K–$600K
Newer subdivisions east of the original townsite. More space per dollar than Silverlake, fewer master-planned amenities, but with the bonus of being closer to the Beltway 8 commute east toward NASA / Clear Lake employers. A good fit for households where one earner commutes south to TMC and the other commutes east toward Bay Area employers.
Free · No Obligation

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Grab 30 minutes with me. Tell me your budget, commute, school priorities, and timeline. I’ll tell you which two or three neighborhoods are actually worth touring — and which to cross off the list. No sales pitch.
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Schools

The District Decides Where You Buy

For families with school-age kids, the school district question is the first filter, not the last. Pearland has three:

  • Pearland ISD covers most of Pearland east of Highway 288 and a good portion to the west. Consistently rated among the top public districts in Greater Houston. The flagship is Dawson High School. Most clients with kids prioritize Pearland ISD zones.
  • Alvin ISD covers most of Shadow Creek Ranch and growing portions of west and southwest Pearland. Strong, fast-growing district with newer schools and aggressive facility investment. Glenda Dawson High and Shadow Creek High are the relevant high schools depending on subdivision.
  • Fort Bend ISD covers the western edges that bleed into Fort Bend County. Excellent district overall, but the Pearland-area portions are smaller and less commonly encountered in home searches.

Two homes on opposite sides of the same street can be in different districts. Always confirm the actual school assignment with the district’s zone-finder tool, not just the listing description. Listing language gets sloppy — the district’s map is the source of truth.

The Commute

Hwy 288, Beltway 8, and the Real Drive Times

Pearland’s commute story lives and dies on Highway 288. The 288 toll lanes (added in 2020) made the run to TMC and downtown dramatically more predictable. Without them, peak-hour traffic adds 15–25 minutes either way. Most of my clients commuting to TMC end up paying for the toll lanes — the time savings are real.

A few practical observations:

  • TMC commute is the headline benefit. Most of my Pearland clients work at the Medical Center, NRG, or downtown. From central Pearland (Silverlake, Old Pearland), 25 minutes is realistic with toll lanes during rush hour.
  • West Pearland adds 10 minutes. Shadow Creek Ranch, Sunset Ranch, and west Pearland new builds are noticeably further. Budget 35 minutes to TMC.
  • The Beltway 8 connection matters east-west. If your work or family is in Sugar Land, Clear Lake, or NASA, the Beltway is your friend. East Pearland (Riverstone Ranch) gets the easiest Beltway access.
  • Energy Corridor and the Galleria are the harder commutes. 45+ minutes either direction. Pearland is not a great fit if you commute west or northwest daily.
Property Taxes

What You Should Know Before You Buy

Texas has no state income tax, so property taxes carry the load. Pearland’s combined effective rate runs higher than the national average, like the rest of the metro. (For the full Greater Houston tax-rate landscape across all four counties, see my Houston property tax guide.) Two specific things you should know going in:

  1. MUD taxes can stack on top of your standard tax bill. Many newer Pearland subdivisions (especially in west Pearland and parts of Shadow Creek Ranch) sit inside a Municipal Utility District. The MUD levy is a separate line item on your tax statement, and it can run 50–100 basis points on top of the base rate. Always pull the full tax breakdown before you make an offer.
  2. The county determines who you protest with. Brazoria-side Pearland homeowners protest with BCAD; Harris-side homeowners protest with HCAD. The deadlines, evidence portals, and process differ. I wrote full step-by-step playbooks for each:

Combine an annual protest with the new $140,000 Texas homestead exemption (effective 2026) and you keep meaningful money out of the appraisal district’s pocket every year you own the home.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best Pearland neighborhood for families?

For most families with school-age kids, Silverlake or Southern Trails inside Pearland ISD are the consensus picks. If you want newer construction and don’t mind Alvin ISD (which is also strong), Shadow Creek Ranch is the obvious choice. The right answer depends on your school priorities, budget, and how much HOA structure you want.

What is the best Pearland neighborhood for first-time buyers?

Old Pearland (the original townsite) is the easiest entry point on price and the lack of HOA gives you flexibility. Smaller, older homes — bring an inspection eye for foundation, roof, and HVAC age. Silverlake’s entry-level homes are the next step up if budget allows.

Is the commute to the Medical Center really only 25 minutes?

From central Pearland, with the Hwy 288 toll lanes, in normal rush-hour traffic, yes. Without the toll lanes you’ll add 15–25 minutes. From far west Pearland, add 10 minutes regardless. Test the actual drive at your real commute time before you commit.

New construction or resale?

Builder incentives in west Pearland are aggressive in 2026 — rate buydowns, closing cost assistance, design center credits. On a price-per-square-foot basis, new construction often beats resale. The trade-off is MUD tax exposure, drainage risk on newly developed land, and the standard new-build punch list. Resale gets you mature trees, predictable taxes, and known neighborhood character. Both can be the right answer. (For sellers thinking through the new-construction-versus-resale dynamic from the listing side, see my pricing guide.)

Are property taxes higher in Pearland than other Houston suburbs?

Roughly comparable to most Houston-area suburbs once you account for school district and any MUD overlay. The wider issue is that Texas property taxes are high overall — not that Pearland is notably worse. The way to manage your bill is to file homestead and protest your appraisal annually. Both meaningfully outperform “hoping for a low number.”

Free Cheat Sheet

Get the Free Pearland Neighborhood Comparison Cheat Sheet

I put together a single-page PDF comparing all seven Pearland sub-areas side-by-side — price ranges, school districts, HOA fees, commute times, and who each one is best for. It’s free — just email me and I’ll send it your way.
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Clicking the button opens your email app with everything pre-filled. Just hit send.
Bottom Line

Narrow It Before You Tour It

The biggest mistake I see Pearland buyers make is treating the city as one market. It is not. Each of these seven sub-areas trades on a different set of priorities — school district, commute, HOA structure, build vintage, MUD exposure. Pick your two or three priorities first, narrow to two or three sub-areas, and only then start touring. Saturday is too short to spend driving from Old Pearland to Sunset Ranch and back.

If you want a real, no-pitch take on which Pearland neighborhoods actually fit your situation, you know where to find me.

Related Reading

About Eddie Weir

I’m Eddie Weir, a top 1% REALTOR® with REMAX Signature in Greater Houston, and I live 15 minutes from Pearland. I hold the ABR (Accredited Buyer’s Representative) and LUXE designations and bring a corporate analytics and strategy background to residential and investment real estate. I work with buyers, sellers, and investors at every price point — first-time homebuyers in Pearland and Spring, move-up families in Katy and Cypress, luxury clients across the Inner Loop, and out-of-state investors building long-term portfolios in Houston’s growth corridors. My service area is the entire metro: Harris, Brazoria, Fort Bend, and Montgomery counties.

“Pearland isn’t one market — it’s seven. Pick your priorities first, narrow to two or three sub-areas, then tour.”

— Eddie Weir, REALTOR®, ABR, LUXE | REMAX Signature

Sources: Houston Association of REALTORS® (HAR) MLS; Pearland ISD, Alvin ISD, and Fort Bend ISD attendance-zone tools; City of Pearland demographic data; Texas Department of Transportation (Hwy 288 toll lane data).

Neighborhood price ranges are approximate and reflect typical Greater Houston single-family resale activity in early 2026; verify with current MLS data for any specific address. School district and MUD assignments must be confirmed for the exact street address before making an offer. This article is general information, not legal, tax, or financial advice.

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