Home / Moving to Houston / From California
California to Houston, charted.
The real cost-of-living math, Proposition 13 versus Texas property tax, neighborhood matches by California origin, hurricane reality, and a 60–90 day relocation timeline.
0%
Texas State Income Tax
~$330K
Houston Median Home (vs ~$800K CA)
60–90 days
Typical CA→Houston Relocation
Top 1% REMAX Producer | 50+ Five-Star Google Reviews | ABR Certified · LUXE Designation
“Eddie’s patience is unmatched. His response time was unbelievable and it honestly felt like he was available 24/7.”
Ayesha Thind · First-time buyer
“He knows his market. The estimate, comps and process were clearly outlined. He fought for what he believed we deserved as his clients.”
Justin Adams · Buyer · Referral
“I never felt pressured into making on-the-spot decisions or going over my budget. Eddie truly had my best interest at heart while representing me.”
Tetiana S. · Buyer
The honest picture
Why Californians keep choosing Houston (with the data, not the brochure)
California to Texas is the largest interstate migration flow in the United States. Per IRS migration data, Texas has gained net population from California every year for over a decade, and Houston has consistently been one of the top three Texas destinations alongside Austin and Dallas-Fort Worth. The reasons aren’t mysterious — they’re mathematical.
Houston gives California professionals four things California stopped providing: a median home price under $350K, zero state income tax, energy costs roughly half of California’s, and meaningful square footage on a meaningful lot. The trade-offs are real (humidity, hurricane season, no mountains) and I cover them honestly below. But for buyers who can think in five-year horizons, the Houston math compounds quickly — especially for families and remote workers no longer tethered to a specific California metro.
I’m Eddie Weir, a Top 1% REMAX Producer based in Houston. I work with California buyers every month — Bay Area tech executives relocating to the Energy Corridor, Los Angeles families heading to Katy or Sugar Land, San Diego retirees moving to Pearland, and remote workers who could live anywhere and chose Houston for the tax math. This guide is what I tell them in our first call.
The numbers
The actual cost math, line by line
Most California-to-Houston comparisons stop at “Texas has no income tax.” That’s the headline, but it’s not the whole picture. Houston’s property tax rates run higher than California’s, and humidity drives summer electricity bills that San Diego buyers don’t see coming. Here’s the line-by-line view of a typical household earning $250K with a $1M home in California versus a $500K home in Houston.
| Category | California (typical) | Houston (typical) |
|---|---|---|
| State income tax | ~9.3% effective at $250K (top bracket 13.3%) | 0% — Texas has no state income tax |
| Home price (3-4 bed, ~2,500 sq ft) | ~$1.0M (Bay Area), $800K–$1.2M (LA/OC), $700K (SD inland) | ~$400K–$550K depending on neighborhood |
| Property tax rate | ~1.1% (Prop 13 capped, assessed at purchase) | ~2.3–3.2% combined (county + ISD + MUD where applicable) |
| Property tax bill (per above) | ~$11K/yr on $1M | ~$11K–$15K/yr on $500K (rate higher, base lower) |
| Homeowner’s insurance | $1,500–$3,500/yr (CA wildfire zones higher) | $2,500–$4,500/yr (TX wind + hail markets harder) |
| Electricity (3-bed home, summer peak) | ~$0.28–$0.32/kWh, ~$200–$300/mo | ~$0.12–$0.15/kWh, ~$250–$400/mo (AC-heavy) |
| Gasoline | ~$5.00–$5.50/gal | ~$2.80–$3.20/gal |
| Groceries, dining, services | ~15–25% above national average | ~Within 5% of national average |
Net for a $250K-earning household: roughly $20K–$30K in annual state income tax savings, $200K–$400K in home-equity savings up front, partially offset by higher property tax and insurance. The break-even versus staying in California typically arrives in year 2–3; after that, the gap widens.
Run your own numbers against a specific Houston neighborhood — the Houston MUD tax guide covers the property tax variance you’ll see between districts, and the Q1 2026 Houston housing market brief tracks current pricing across the Greater Houston area.
Where to land
Neighborhood matches by California origin
Where you lived in California is a useful starting point for where you’ll feel at home in Houston. Not because Houston has a one-to-one match for the Bay Area or Westside LA — it doesn’t — but because the priorities you optimized for in California (commute pattern, school district quality, walkability, square footage, lifestyle) map predictably to specific Houston submarkets.
From the Bay Area
Tech and finance executives generally head to Memorial, Energy Corridor, or The Woodlands. Memorial trades on SBISD schools and mature lots; Energy Corridor sits near the major employers along the West Beltway 8 corridor; The Woodlands offers a Conroe ISD planned-community lifestyle. Remote workers often choose The Heights for walkability.
From Los Angeles & Orange County
LA and OC families typically gravitate to Bellaire & West University Place for Inner Loop school zoning, River Oaks or Tanglewood for the luxury bracket, or Katy and Fulshear for master-planned community living at price points the OC stopped offering decades ago.
From San Diego & the Coast
Coastal California buyers usually want the closest Houston equivalent to ocean proximity. That’s Clear Lake, Friendswood & League City (Galveston Bay, 30 minutes from beach) or Pearland (south of the loop, easy bay access). The Inner Loop with a pool is also a common landing spot.
From the Central Valley & Inland Empire
Central Valley and Inland Empire families often choose Cypress (Cy-Fair ISD), Sugar Land, Missouri City, or Sienna. The pattern: master-planned communities with strong schools at $400K–$600K price points and family-corridor logic.
None of these is prescriptive — it’s a starting point. The full Greater Houston neighborhood guide covers 22 submarkets in detail, and a 30-minute call with me will narrow it to two or three specifically matched to your situation.
Where the work is
The Houston job market for California professionals
Houston is the 4th largest US city by population and the energy capital of the world, but the economy is broader than oil and gas. For California professionals relocating, the major employer corridors fall into five clusters.
Energy (oil, gas, renewables)
ExxonMobil’s North Houston campus, Chevron, Shell, BP, Phillips 66, ConocoPhillips, and the major independents are headquartered or have major operations in Houston. The Energy Corridor along West Beltway 8 is the geographic center. Neighborhoods: Energy Corridor, Memorial, The Woodlands (ExxonMobil HQ proximity), Cinco Ranch / Katy.
Texas Medical Center
TMC is the largest medical complex in the world — 54 institutions, 106,000+ employees, 10 million patient encounters annually. Houses the world’s largest children’s hospital (Texas Children’s) and largest cancer hospital (MD Anderson). Neighborhoods: Medical Center South, Bellaire, West University, Pearland.
Aerospace & tech
NASA Johnson Space Center (Clear Lake), SpaceX expansion, and a growing Houston tech corridor anchored by HPE, Microsoft Houston, and the Ion innovation hub in Midtown. Neighborhoods: Clear Lake, EaDo, Midtown, Inner Loop.
Healthcare & biotech (beyond TMC)
Methodist, Memorial Hermann, Houston Methodist West, HCA Healthcare facilities throughout Greater Houston. Healthcare professionals often choose neighborhoods near specific hospitals rather than TMC proper.
Port, petrochemical & manufacturing
Port of Houston is one of the largest in the US by tonnage. ExxonMobil Baytown, LyondellBasell Channelview, Dow Texas Operations, and the broader petrochemical complex employ tens of thousands. Neighborhoods: Pasadena, Deer Park, La Porte, Baytown.
Want this run for your situation?
Send me your current California metro, timeline, and budget band — I’ll come back with three matched neighborhoods and a property-tax comparison built off your actual numbers.
For families
Texas schools, explained for California parents
California parents moving to Houston usually have three school questions: How does Texas accountability compare to California? Are private schools necessary? And what does “A-rated” actually mean? Short version — Texas runs a strong school accountability system (TEA ratings A–F per campus, refreshed annually), and several Houston-area ISDs consistently produce top-decile outcomes.
The ISDs most California families end up in:
- Katy ISD (KISD) — ~90,000 students, 8 high schools, strong A-rating trend. The West-side standard. Neighborhoods: Katy, Cinco Ranch, Cross Creek Ranch (overlapping with Lamar CISD), Cane Island.
- Cy-Fair ISD (CFISD) — ~115,000 students, 12 high schools, A/B range. The NW corridor anchor. Neighborhoods: Cypress, Bridgeland, Towne Lake.
- Fort Bend ISD (FBISD) — ~75K–80K students, 8 high schools, B/A range. Strong diverse community. Neighborhoods: Sugar Land, Missouri City, Sienna.
- Spring Branch ISD (SBISD) — smaller, A-rated, anchors Memorial Villages.
- Conroe ISD (CISD) — The Woodlands and north Montgomery County. A-rated and growing.
Texas school choice options — charter schools, magnet programs, transfers within district — are broader than California’s. The Greater Houston school districts hub covers each ISD with TEA ratings, campus counts, and neighborhood zoning.
The honest trade-offs
Climate adjustment — humidity, hurricane season, AC bills
Two things California buyers underestimate: Houston humidity from May through September, and the air-conditioning bill that humidity drives. One thing California buyers overestimate: hurricane risk to a typical inland Houston home.
Humidity: Houston runs 70–85% relative humidity through summer. The temperature on your phone in mid-August might read 95°F, but the heat index is 105°F+. This is meaningfully harder on the body than Los Angeles or San Diego summers. The adjustment takes a full summer — most California transplants tell me year two feels normal.
AC bills: A typical 3-bedroom Houston home runs $250–$400/month in electricity during peak summer (June–September). That’s comparable to coastal California in raw dollars, but the kWh rate is lower — you’re paying for usage, not unit cost. Modern construction with good insulation and a properly-sized HVAC system makes a real difference.
Hurricane season: June 1 through November 30. Modern Houston homes built post-1990 to current Texas Department of Insurance wind code handle Category 1–2 storms without significant damage. The honest framing on flooding: most of Greater Houston is not in a FEMA Special Flood Hazard Area (the high-risk zones), and the floods that made national news (Harvey, Imelda) were rainfall-driven, not storm-surge-driven, and disproportionately affected specific drainage-challenged corridors that are well-mapped. The Houston flood zones buyer guide covers how to read a flood map before you make an offer, and the Houston hurricane prep guide covers insurance and risk.
No real winter: January and February average highs of 60–65°F. Hard freezes happen once or twice per decade (Uri in February 2021 was the notable exception). California families often consider this a feature, not a trade-off — pool season runs March through October.
The playbook
A typical 60–90 day California-to-Houston relocation
Most California-to-Houston relocations I work on run 60–90 days from first call to close. The compressed timeline is possible because Houston inventory turns faster than California inventory, financing moves quickly with a strong lender, and Texas closings are streamlined relative to California escrow.
Weeks 1–2: Discovery & preapproval
- 30-minute call: situation, timeline, budget band, school priorities, neighborhood preferences.
- I introduce you to two or three preferred Houston lenders for preapproval. Texas lenders are familiar with California buyers and the income/asset structures California professionals typically present.
- Initial neighborhood narrowing — usually we shortlist 2–4 areas.
Weeks 3–5: First Houston visit & tour
- You fly in for a 2–3 day visit. We tour the shortlisted neighborhoods and 8–15 specific properties.
- I walk you through Houston-specific things California buyers wouldn’t catch: MUD district disclosure, foundation considerations on Houston clay soil, flood-zone reading, HOA documents.
- By end of visit, we usually identify the target neighborhood and 1–3 strong candidate properties.
Weeks 5–7: Offer & contract
- Offer drafted on the TREC contract. I negotiate the terms California buyers don’t typically see in CA contracts — option period (Texas-specific 7–10 day inspection window), seller’s disclosure, MUD/HOA disclosure receipt, survey assignment.
- Once executed, you wire earnest money and option fee. Inspections begin in the option period.
Weeks 7–12: Inspections, appraisal, financing, close
- Inspection results reviewed; any repair negotiations handled before the option period expires.
- Appraisal ordered by lender. Texas appraisers typically turn around in 7–14 days.
- Title work runs in parallel. Texas title insurance is buyer-paid (different from CA) and rates are state-regulated.
- Final walkthrough, closing day. You can close in person or remotely — many California buyers close remotely and fly in after.
The full process is documented in the Houston buyer guide. For the specifics of the Texas contract, see Houston offer and contract; for the option period, see option period and inspections.
The questions Californians actually ask
FAQ — California to Houston
Do I lose Prop 13 benefits when I move from California to Houston?
How serious is the Houston flooding risk for buyers moving from California?
I work remotely — do I need to be in a specific Houston neighborhood?
Will my California driver’s license, car registration, and voter registration transfer?
How does the Texas heat actually feel compared to inland California?
Can I keep my California real estate license to invest in Houston rentals?
What’s the deal with MUD districts — do all Houston suburbs have them?
How do Houston public schools compare to California public schools?
I sold a California home with significant capital gains — how does that work moving to Texas?
Should I rent in Houston first to figure out where I want to live?
Moving from elsewhere?
Other state-specific Houston relocation guides
Moving to Houston from New York — SALT cap math, NYC and tri-state property tax comparison, neighborhood matches by NY origin.
Moving to Houston (main hub) — the full Houston relocation playbook across cost, schools, neighborhoods, and timeline.
Ready to run your California-to-Houston numbers?
Send me your situation — current California metro, target Houston timeline, budget band, school priorities, employer (if known) — and I’ll come back with three matched neighborhoods, a property-tax line-item comparison, and a typical 60-90 day path to close. Or pick the call link below for a 30-minute conversation.