Neighborhood-level market intelligence, first-hand expertise, and a referral-built practice serving Houston's most discerning buyers and sellers since day one.
Schedule a Private Consultation →Every neighborhood has its own pricing dynamics, school district calculus, flood profile, and lifestyle character. Below are the enclaves we know block by block.
Pricing dynamics across Houston's luxury neighborhoods, updated quarterly. These figures inform every pricing strategy, listing recommendation, and buyer negotiation we execute.
| Neighborhood | ZIP | Median Price (Luxury) | Price / Sq Ft | YoY Change | Avg DOM | Active Inventory |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| River Oaks | 77019 | $2,800,000 | $450 – $800+ | -13.6%* | 62 | Growing |
| Memorial Villages | 77024 | $1,600,000 | $300 – $550 | -0.05% | 48 | Stable |
| Tanglewood | 77056 | $2,200,000 | $350 – $650 | Slight softening | 38 | Very Low |
| West University | 77005 | $1,450,000 | $350 – $550 | -8.6% | 44 | Moderate |
| Bellaire | 77401 | $950,000 | $280 – $450 | +0.9% | 35 | Moderate |
| Royal Oaks | 77082 | $1,050,000 | $220 – $380 | Stable | 52 | Low |
| Hunters Creek | 77024 | $1,800,000 | $320 – $520 | Flat | 46 | Low |
| Piney Point | 77024 | $2,400,000 | $350 – $600 | Flat | 55 | Very Low |
| Carlton Woods | 77381 | $2,500,000 | $280 – $500 | +3.7% | 58 | Growing |
| Garden Oaks | 77018 | $750,000 | $250 – $400 | Stable | 32 | Moderate |
* River Oaks YoY decline is zip-median weighted and reflects condo/townhouse softening more than estate pricing; trophy properties ($5M+) remain stable with limited inventory. Figures are illustrative composites drawn from Redfin, Zillow, and HAR data as of Q2 2026, updated quarterly. They are not a guarantee of current pricing. DOM and inventory columns reflect directional estimates, not exact MLS counts.
Most people hear "Houston luxury" and they picture River Oaks. They picture a big gate, a long driveway, and a number north of five million. And that world exists — I have worked in it. But the reality of luxury in this city is so much wider and more layered than that one ZIP code.
I talk to homeowners across Houston every single day. Katy. Sugar Land. The Heights. Spring. And the pattern is always the same: people have no idea what their home is actually doing for them financially. They bought it, they live in it, and they assume everything is fine. That assumption is costing people real money.
Take Bellaire. Right now it is the only inner-loop luxury enclave showing positive year-over-year growth — up 0.9% when River Oaks is down over 13% at the zip-median level and West University has pulled back 8.6%. Bellaire at $950K median luxury is the most accessible entry point into Houston's premium neighborhoods, and the IB program at Bellaire High School is drawing families who would have gone straight to West U five years ago. That is the kind of shift that does not show up in a headline. It shows up when you are on the ground, talking to buyers and listing agents every week.
Relocation is a huge part of what I do. Ninety-five percent of my business comes from referrals — someone in Los Angeles or New York or Chicago calls a friend who calls me. And the first thing every single one of those buyers says is some version of the same sentence: "I cannot believe what I can get here." A $3 million budget in River Oaks buys an estate that would cost $8 to $12 million in Bel Air or the Upper East Side. No state income tax. World-class medical center. The energy corridor driving corporate demand.
But here is what I always tell them: do not just look at the price. Look at the days on market. Look at the flood zone. Look at the MUD district taxes. Look at the school district — because in Memorial Villages, you are in Spring Branch ISD, which is a completely different calculus than HISD in River Oaks. Those details are the difference between a smooth transaction and carrying two mortgages while you sweat. That is what a local specialist is for. Not to sell you a house. To make sure you understand what you are actually buying.
The luxury market in Houston is not one market. It is ten micro-markets that each have their own pricing dynamic, their own buyer profile, and their own timing. Tanglewood has almost no inventory — when something comes up, it moves fast. West U has only 3,200 total lots in 1.4 square miles, so scarcity is permanently baked in. Carlton Woods in The Woodlands is surging with an 18.7% city median gain because the corporate relocation pipeline from Exxon, Chevron Phillips, and Huntsman is real and it is accelerating.
I do not pretend to have all the answers. But I do know this market at the street level, and I know the numbers behind every neighborhood I serve. If you want a no-strings, no-pressure look at your position — whether you are buying, selling, or just trying to understand what your biggest asset is doing for you — reach out. I do this every day, and I am happy to run the data for you.
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