A practical move read: who it fits, what to verify, local signals, and market timing.
Moving to Texas: the honest read
Texas is the biggest no-income-tax state and the tradeoffs are exactly what you'd expect: property taxes are among the highest in the country (often 2-3% of assessed value, which on a $500K house gets ugly fast), and the state funds itself through that and sales tax. The four metros are functionally different states — Houston (energy, the medical center, the most racially and economically diverse, hurricane and flooding exposure), Dallas-Fort Worth (corporate relocations, finance, the airline hub, sprawl as a way of life), Austin (tech-and-government, expensive now in ways it wasn't a decade ago), and San Antonio (military, healthcare, the most affordable of the big four). Summers run four-plus months above 95, the grid has had real failures (the 2021 winter storm killed hundreds), and home insurance has been repricing hard after recent hail and wind years. The cultural variation across the state is wider than non-Texans usually credit.
Should you move to Irving?
fit-first marketIrving is not flashing a strong market-timing signal. Treat this as a day-to-day fit decision: commute, housing quality, schools, taxes, and local services matter more than momentum.
Best fit
- People who want a larger job market, more services, and more neighborhood variety.
- People who value some daily-life convenience: the walk/transit read is somewhat walkable / minimal transit.
- Remote or hybrid workers who want more housing space while keeping a workable services base (excellent for remote work).
Think twice if
- People trying to escape big-city friction entirely; larger cities usually trade opportunity for traffic, cost, and noise.
Verify before you commit
- Separate county-level incident headlines from block-level safety by checking police logs, school-zone data, and recent local meetings.
- Check road closures, utility reliability, flood/storm exposure, and emergency-service coverage for the exact neighborhood.
- Confirm property taxes, insurance quotes, HOA rules, school assignment, and internet options before making the move decision.
What the public signal says about Irving
Irving local news and community threads. These are city-level public signals, useful for color but still not a substitute for visiting.
Recent local-news signals
- Tesla is Planning a Dedicated Robotaxi Hub in Texas [VIDEO]Not a Tesla App
- Irving middle schoolers invent power-generating shoes that can charge a phoneSpectrum News
- Irving Police investigate after finding body near train tracks, officials sayWFAA
- Irving teen uses AI dash cam idea to tackle deadly wrong-way crashes in TexasNBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth
Forum/community signals
- left hoodier/irving
- Has anyone here actually used respite care in Irving just to take a short break?r/irving
- Mom/baby activitiesr/irving
- I votedr/irving
Market timing and city context
Sideways market (-2.2% YoY). No urgency to time the macro trend — focus on the home and neighborhood.
Irving is a city in Dallas County, Texas, with an estimated population of 258,060. It's part of the Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington metro area. The median home value in Irving is $344,888 as of 2026-04, down 2.2% over the last 12 months. Over the last five years, home values have averaged +4.1% annual growth (-4.7% from the 5-year peak). Rents in Irving average $1,583 per month, roughly flat year-over-year (+0.7%). The composite momentum score is 54 of 100 (Stable). Neither hot nor cold, so the neighborhood and the house matter more than the market read.
Use the market read as a screen, not a decision. A good move still comes down to exact neighborhood, commute pattern, school zone, insurance cost, and whether the place feels livable after work and on weekends.
More about Irving
What this move will cost
Real upfront cash to land in Irving, plus what you’ll carry month to month.
Cash to move in (renting)
| Rental | Typical rent | Cash to sign (1st + deposit) |
|---|---|---|
| Studio | $1,235/mo | $2,470 |
| 1-bed | $1,393/mo | $2,786 |
| 2-bed | $1,583/mo | $3,166 |
| 3-bed | $1,931/mo | $3,862 |
If you buy near the local median of $344,888, plan on about $6,001/yr in property tax (~$500/mo) at Texas’s effective rate of 1.74%. Lenders escrow this on top of principal & interest.
Getting your stuff here
| Move size | Local movers (<100 mi) | Long-distance (1,000 mi+) |
|---|---|---|
| 1-bed home | $500–$1,100 | $1,700–$3,700 |
| 2-bed home | $900–$2,000 | $2,800–$6,000 |
| 3-bed home | $1,300–$2,800 | $4,000–$8,500 |
DIY truck rental instead of movers: about $150–$600 local, $1,200–$3,500 one-way long-distance, plus fuel. Ranges are national averages — your quote moves with exact distance, stairs/elevator access, and season (summer is priciest).
Your relocation checklist
The official, no-cost places to handle the paperwork after you decide on Irving.
- Driver’s license & vehicle registrationOpen DMV →
New Texas residents usually have 30–90 days to switch — confirm the exact deadline at the Texas DPS (driver license). - Forward your mailUSPS change of address →
File a USPS change of address ($1.10 identity-verification fee) a week or two before you move. - Register to voteRegister / update →
Update your registration to your new Irving address — the official, no-cost portal routes you to Texas. - Turn on utilitiesFind providers →
Line up electric, gas, water/sewer, trash, and internet to start on move-in day. - Check the school districtLook up by address →
Enrollment is by address — confirm which schools serve the home you’re considering before you sign. - Update your address everywhere elseIRS address change →
Bank, insurance, employer/payroll, IRS, and your state tax agency. Auto and renters/home insurance rates can change with the ZIP.
Sources: Zillow ZHVI (home values), Zillow ZORI (rents), US Census ACS + place population; Google News RSS and public Reddit RSS when cached for local signal. Updated when source agencies publish revisions.