Markets like New York, LA, and the Bay Area are wonderful for many things. Real estate investment returns are not currently one of them.
Houston is. Here's the case.
1. Population is still growing — and fast
The Houston metro added more residents than almost any other U.S. metropolitan area in recent years. People keep moving here because:
- No state income tax
- Cost of living is roughly 30-40% lower than coastal cities
- The Texas Medical Center is the largest medical complex in the world
- Energy sector, aerospace (NASA), Port of Houston — diverse, large-scale industry
- Diverse population — Houston is one of the most ethnically diverse cities in the country
Population growth is the most reliable predictor of long-term real estate appreciation. More people, finite land, demand rises.
2. The math actually works
In most major markets right now, you cannot buy a property, rent it out, and break even on cash flow without putting down 30%+. In Houston, the 1% rule (monthly rent ≥ 1% of purchase price) is still achievable in multiple submarkets.
A $230,000 single-family home in certain Houston neighborhoods can rent for $2,000-2,300/month. That's a property where the rent covers the mortgage, taxes, insurance, and management — and still cash flows. Try finding that in Austin, let alone LA.
3. Tax advantages
Texas has no state income tax. That means your rental income isn't double-taxed the way it is in California or New York. Property taxes in Texas are higher than national average (typically 2.2-3.0% of assessed value), but the absence of state income tax usually more than compensates for serious investors.
4. Diverse submarkets means diverse strategies
Houston isn't one investment thesis. It's a dozen:
- Buy-and-hold single family — Cypress, Pearland, Spring
- Value-add multifamily — submarkets near the medical center and downtown
- Short-term rental (STR) — Heights, Montrose, EaDo (check city regulations)
- BRRR (Buy, Rehab, Rent, Refinance, Repeat) — older neighborhoods with intact bones
- Land banking — outer-loop areas in the path of growth
- House hacking — duplex/triplex purchases in transitional neighborhoods
5. The job base is real
People move where jobs are. Houston has:
- The Texas Medical Center (~120,000 employees)
- Energy headquarters (still the U.S. energy capital, despite the transition)
- The Port of Houston (one of the largest in the U.S.)
- NASA / aerospace
- A growing tech presence (Houston Spaceport, energy transition tech)
Diversified employment base means the city doesn't collapse when one industry has a bad quarter. That's not always true of single-industry cities.
The honest caveats
Property taxes are high
You'll pay 2-3%+ of assessed value annually. That's a real expense. Always factor it into your underwriting.
Insurance costs are climbing
Hurricane risk + flooding history = rising insurance premiums. In some neighborhoods, flood insurance is non-negotiable. Always check the FEMA flood map for any property you're considering.
Houston is sprawl-y
Vacancy and tenant quality vary dramatically by submarket. A property that cash flows beautifully in one zip code can sit empty in the next one over. Local knowledge matters more here than in markets with clearer block-by-block boundaries.
What I do for investor clients
I run the numbers with you — not just gross rent, but realistic vacancy, maintenance reserves, management fees, taxes, insurance, and capital expenditures. Then I help you find properties that actually meet your criteria.
If the math doesn't work, I'll tell you. I'd rather you walk away from a bad deal than buy one because I wanted the commission.
The best deal isn't the one with the highest projected return. It's the one whose projections are most likely to be true.