The honest relocation guide: cost of living, commute reality, what surprises most people, and what nobody tells you before you move to Temple, Belton, or the surrounding area.
Most relocation guides lead with the positives. I’d rather give you the complete picture so you move here with accurate expectations — the people who love living here knew what they were getting into.
Real numbers — not national averages applied to a zip code.
| Category | Bell County | vs. Austin | vs. National Average |
|---|---|---|---|
| Median home price (Temple) | $255,000 | −51% cheaper | −30% cheaper |
| Median home price (Belton) | $320,000 | −39% cheaper | −13% cheaper |
| 3BR apartment rent (Temple) | $1,550–$1,713/mo | Significantly lower | Below national |
| Overall cost of living | ~15% below national avg | 35% cheaper than Austin | −15% |
| State income tax | $0 — Texas has none | Same (Texas) | Major advantage |
| Effective property tax rate | 1.74%–2.2% | Similar to Austin | Above national avg |
| Homestead exemption | $140K off school taxes | File after closing | File by April 30 |
| Homeowners insurance | $3,400+/yr on $300K home | Higher than most states | Hail/storm premium |
| Groceries | ~6% below national avg | Lower than Austin | Moderate advantage |
Property tax note: Texas funds schools through property taxes, not income tax. The effective rate feels high but your take-home pay is higher too. File your homestead exemption immediately after closing — it removes $140K from your school tax calculation and caps annual increases at 10%.
Bell County’s economy has two major anchors — BSW Medical and Fort Cavazos — plus a growing roster of employers drawn by the I-35 corridor and Texas’s business-friendly environment.
These are the things that surprise most people after they arrive.