Home / Fort Bend ISD

Fort Bend, district by district.

One of Texas’s most diverse strong districts — Sugar Land’s high-performers, Missouri City’s MPC growth corridor, and the trade-offs buyers need to read campus-by-campus before they commit.

Top 1% REMAX Producer
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Students ~75-80K
High Schools 8
TEA Range B/A
Last Updated May 2026

Section 1

The basics

Size & geography

Size. Roughly 75,000-80,000 students. Among the 10 largest districts in Texas.

Geography. Sugar Land, Missouri City, and large portions of unincorporated Fort Bend County. Stafford has its own Stafford MSD — it is not part of FBISD.

Structure & boundaries

Structure. Traditional zoned neighborhood schools, with strong choice programs at specific campuses.

Boundary note. FBISD does not cover all of Fort Bend County. Lamar CISD covers Richmond, Rosenberg, and most of the western county. Cross Creek Ranch, Aliana edges, and parts of Sienna can sit in LCISD instead of FBISD. Verify per parcel.

Section 2

The TEA rating context

FBISD’s overall district rating from the Texas Education Agency has historically landed in the B/A range, with most campuses falling somewhere between B and A. A handful of high-performing high schools (Clements, Dulles, Hightower) consistently sit at the top end; others rest in the middle. Buyer takeaway: campus-level variance inside FBISD is real, so the specific zoned campus matters more here than in a more uniformly-rated district.

One caveat: the last published TEA ratings reflect 2024 / early 2026 data. The next refresh is expected mid-August. If you’re weighing campuses today, treat the published rating as a floor and confirm any specific campus with the most recent TEA release before you build it into your offer.

Section 3

Why families move into FBISD

Diversity + outcomes

FBISD is genuinely one of the most demographically diverse districts in Texas, with strong academic outcomes at the top end. Many families specifically want that combination.

Specific high-performing campuses

Clements HS (Sugar Land), Dulles HS (Sugar Land), and Hightower HS draw families on reputation alone.

MPC alignment

Riverstone, Telfair, First Colony, Sweetwater, and large parts of Sienna align cleanly to FBISD feeder patterns.

Established neighborhoods

Mature trees, mature HOAs, deeper resale history — FBISD’s footprint has been settling for 30+ years, which means more data to underwrite.

Sugar Land identity

Sugar Land’s independent city services, retail, and dining are part of what families are buying alongside the schools.

How I help

I run the zoning per address and look at campus-level outcomes — not the district average. FBISD’s variance makes that step matter.

Section 4

Standout FBISD campuses buyers ask about

TEA 2024 Accountability Ratings

CampusGradesTEA 2024
High schools
Clements HS9–12A
Dulles HS9–12B
Hightower HS9–12D
Feeder middle schools
First Colony Middle · feeds Clements6–8A
Fort Settlement Middle · feeds Clements6–8A
Sartartia Middle · feeds Clements6–8A
Dulles Middle · feeds Dulles HS6–8B
Sugar Land Middle · feeds Dulles HS6–8C
Quail Valley Middle · feeds Hightower6–8B
Baines Middle · feeds Hightower (partial)6–8A
Lake Olympia Middle · feeds Hightower6–8F

Source: Texas Education Agency 2024 accountability ratings (released after the 2023 appeals process, last refresh December 2025). School zoning changes year to year; always verify the zoned campus for a specific address at txschools.gov before writing an offer.

On the lower-rated campuses: Hightower HS was rated D (69) in 2024 — up from D (63) in 2023, so the trend is positive. Lake Olympia Middle, a Hightower feeder, rated F (59). Ratings reflect campus performance over a single year and don’t capture individual classrooms, magnet pathways, or program-by-program outcomes. If you’re zoned to either campus, the right move is to walk the building during your option period and talk to current parents — not to rule the home out on a letter alone.

High schools

A Clements HS

One of the most-requested campuses in the entire Houston metro. Strong academics, broad extracurriculars, established feeder pattern.

B Dulles HS

Sugar Land staple with deep choice programs and strong academic outcomes.

D Hightower HS

Strong academics, IB and choice programming, and a distinctly different neighborhood feel from Clements/Dulles.

Also strong feeders

Elkins HS, Travis HS, Kempner HS, Austin HS, Ridge Point HS. Each has its own zone and price range — the specific zone matters.

Notable middles and elementaries

Middles families ask about: Sartartia MS, Quail Valley MS, First Colony MS, Fort Settlement MS. Elementary quality varies by neighborhood — confirm the zoned campus before underwriting the offer.

Section 5

Neighborhoods inside FBISD

First Colony

The legacy Sugar Land MPC — mature trees, deep amenity package, established resale market.

Sweetwater

Established Sugar Land sub-community zoned to Clements-area campuses; broad lot range.

Riverstone

Newer-build MPC in Missouri City with strong amenity programming and a mix of price points.

Telfair / Imperial

Sugar Land MPCs with tighter community feel and distinct architecture standards.

Quail Valley, parts of Sienna, Fort Bend Country area

Established neighborhoods with mature housing stock and a wider price range than the newer MPCs.

Sienna note

Sienna is primarily FBISD but parts are Lamar CISD. Always check per address.

Section 6

Trade-offs worth knowing

Commute

FBISD’s footprint is far enough south/southwest that Energy Corridor or downtown commutes can run 30-50 minutes each way at peak.

MUD taxes

Most FBISD MPCs sit in a MUD. Total effective tax rate (school + city/county + MUD) commonly lands 2.2%-3.0%. Always run total tax math before payment-based offers.

Growth pace

Sienna and parts of Missouri City are still actively building out — newer phases bring construction noise, traffic pattern shifts, and amenity timing uncertainty.

Brazos River and bayou flood patterns

Parts of FBISD touch the Brazos River and a few major bayous. Floodplain and elevation diligence is mandatory. See my Houston flood zone buyer guide.

Section 7

What to ask before committing to an FBISD home

  1. Exact zoned campus. FBISD has more campus-level variance than KISD — use the FBISD locator at the parcel.
  2. Total effective property tax rate. School + city/county + MUD. Calculate the full annual number.
  3. Master-planned community HOA structure. Dues, amenity scope, special assessments — they vary across First Colony, Riverstone, Telfair, and Sienna.
  4. Flood designation. FEMA zone, last-flood history, finished floor elevation versus base flood elevation. Critical near the Brazos.
  5. Sienna or Cross Creek edge cases. Confirm the district (FBISD vs LCISD vs KISD) at the address before you fall in love with the listing.

Section 8

How I help families navigate FBISD

I work with FBISD buyers every week. The biggest value I add is on the variance side — campus-level outcomes, the MUD load on the specific home, the LCISD-vs-FBISD line on Sienna and Cross Creek edges, and the flood diligence on anything close to the Brazos.

If you’re comparing FBISD to KISD or CFISD, I can walk you through where the trade-offs actually land for your family — instead of district stereotypes.

Fort Bend ISD · Buyer Consultation

Buying in Fort Bend ISD?

I help families decode FBISD attendance zones, magnet programs, and the neighborhoods that feed the top campuses — without the realtor jargon.

About the Author
EW

Eddie Weir REALTOR®

Top 1% REMAX · ABR · LUXE · License #560899
Greater Houston Real Estate

50+ Five-Star Reviews 5.0 Google Rating 10+ Years Houston

Eddie Weir is a top 1% REMAX REALTOR® in Greater Houston, known for straight talk, thoughtful strategy, and results-driven client service. From first homes to investment properties, he helps buyers, sellers, and investors move with clarity, confidence, and a custom plan built around their goals.

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