400+ acres of Texas Hill Country. Private lake access. Custom artisan homes on 1–4 acre lots. No city taxes. This is what estate living looks like in Bell County.
The Enclave at Lake Belton is not a standard subdivision. Conceived by Rancho Lago Development and spanning more than 400 acres of Bell County Hill Country, it was built around one idea: give people the space, privacy, and natural setting they’d normally have to leave Central Texas to find.
Every homesite is custom. There are no production builders, no cookie-cutter floor plans, and no HOA rules requiring architectural conformity to a stripped-down standard. Lots range from just under 1 acre to nearly 4 acres — most with the kind of privacy that makes a neighbor’s build an afterthought rather than a daily reality.
The community has a private trail to Lake Belton’s shoreline, a playscape, and wide open spaces framed by large oaks. No city taxes means a meaningfully lower carrying cost compared to in-city luxury — a detail that matters when you’re comparing effective cost-of-ownership across Bell County options.
A controlled-access gate and acreage lot sizes mean genuine privacy — not the illusion of it. Buyers at this level want to know their neighbors are deliberate, not incidental.
A community trail provides private access to Lake Belton — fishing, kayaking, and lake recreation without leaving your neighborhood. The boat ramp across Highway 36 extends that access further.
Lots run from just under 1 acre to nearly 4 acres. That means room for a separate garage, shop, guest house, or pool — all within the same property footprint, without cramping the main home.
No production builders. Every home in the Enclave is artisan-crafted to the buyer’s spec. That protects long-term property values and ensures the community maintains its character as it builds out.
Being outside city limits means no city property tax layer. On a $1.1M home in Texas, that’s a real annual savings that compounds year over year — and it improves your effective cost-of-ownership versus in-city alternatives.
Zoned to Belton Independent School District, including Lake Belton High School less than 10 minutes away. Belton ISD is one of the more respected districts in Bell County, which matters for families and resale.
Not every luxury buyer in Bell County is the right fit for the Enclave. Here’s who typically thrives here — and why.
A 15-minute commute to Baylor Scott & White’s Temple campus, combined with acreage, privacy, and Belton ISD schools, makes this the right answer for senior physicians and hospital administrators who want genuine separation from urban density.
Buyers selling Austin homes at $800K–$1.2M and arriving with equity. They want to build or buy something custom that they couldn’t afford in the city. The Enclave gives them the land and the build quality — at a price point that often comes in under what they cleared on their Austin sale.
Buyers for whom the primary criterion is space and separation. They’ve lived in neighborhoods where properties are 20 feet apart and they’re done. The Enclave’s 1–4 acre lots, gated access, and Hill Country setting solve that problem definitively.
Yes — the Enclave has had lots available for custom builds with no required build timeline. Lot sizes range from just under 1 acre to nearly 4 acres. Community and co-op water is available, along with aerobic septic. If you’re interested in building rather than buying an existing home, this is one of the few communities in Bell County where you can do so at the estate level without a rushed timeline. Call me at 254-307-4679 to discuss current availability.
The Enclave at Lake Belton is approximately 15 minutes from Temple and the Baylor Scott & White Medical Center campus. The community is located off Highway 36 near Moody, TX in Bell County. While it’s outside city limits — which is how it avoids city taxes — it’s not remote. The drive to BSW is straightforward and the route avoids most of Temple’s traffic.
In Texas, city property taxes typically run 0.4% to 0.9% of assessed value, depending on the municipality. On a $1M home, that’s $4,000–$9,000 per year in city-layer taxes you’re not paying at the Enclave. Over a 10-year ownership period at the low end, that’s $40,000 in savings — before compounding. You’ll still pay county and school district taxes, but the city layer is removed entirely. This is one of the most underappreciated financial advantages of the Enclave’s location.
The Enclave has preferred builders for new construction within the community. I’d recommend contacting me first so I can connect you with the right people and help you understand any covenants or build requirements before you commit to a lot or a builder relationship. Skipping that step has caused headaches for some buyers who assumed the community was fully open to any contractor.
Whether you’re looking for an existing custom home or a lot to build on, I can walk you through current availability, lot characteristics, and what realistic build costs look like in 2026. No pressure, just numbers.