Anyone from Austin, TX???

Lesleyluvsdisney

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Hi!!

My husbAnd has had a job opportunity in Austin. We have a daughter aged 10, and even though it's a great opportunity, I am extremely unsure, if it is the right move!! Can anyone tell me more about Austin?

Thanks xx
 
Hi!!

My husbAnd has had a job opportunity in Austin. We have a daughter aged 10, and even though it's a great opportunity, I am extremely unsure, if it is the right move!! Can anyone tell me more about Austin?

Thanks xx
I've lived here most of my life. What do you want to know? :goodvibes
 
Hey thanks for quick reply!! My main worry is it's 5000 miles away from home. DH works in electronics, so best place to stay, are the schools good, what hours do they do? What holidays do the kids get? Does it getting really hot?! So much I need to find out, we need to apply for resident visas etc, leaving parents behind.. Xx
 
DH took a job opportunity in Austin in 2000, and we never regretted taking our family there. It was a great place to raise a family. It does get warm in summer, hot enough that we limited outdoor activities for 6-8 weeks in the heat of the afternoon but it is nothing like summer in Phoenix. There are some great schools, both public and private. If you know what part of Austin your husband would be working in we can give more information about where some areas to look at housing would be.
 

I don't live in Austin, but i live in Houston. And i've been to Austin tons of times, Austin is a great city with lots of history being that it's the state capital of Texas.
 
I've been in Austin since birth... One of the few! It's certainly going to be warmer in the summer here than in Scotland! But on the other hand, there's nothing like sitting at the Oasis in January on a freak 80 degree day. (The Oasis is a bar/restaurant overlooking the lake)

Lots of people like the Round Rock school district (it's part of north Austin). I went to those schools myself and started by sending my DD there but ended up going private. I think there are also lots of great schools that are part of the Austin schools, but like anywhere there are good and bad schools.

If you're fairly liberal, and you like things a little "green" and hippy, You'll probably love Austin. We are the blueberry in the bowl of tomato soup if you look at a map of TX showing political leanings. It's also a great place for technology geeks (I myself am one) with lots of user's groups for education and networking.

What else?
 
You'll love it here! Austin consistently comes up as one of the best places to raise and family, work and live. I moved away for college, but came back to raise our family.

The Round Rock and Leander School District are the two that I would stay within. Those will be in the Northwest Austin area. I used to homeschool, but my kids are now in public school and I've been very impressed. :teacher: We have 3 months off for summer and schools start for the fall around the last week in August. You can google the calendar of the school district and find out what a typical school year looks like. :thumbsup2

There's a lot of really fun family things to do around here. We have a lot of lakes, live music, and culture. It definately gets HOT! :headache: We tend to stay inside for most of July and August, unless it's morning or we're swimming. I would say the weather's very similar to WDW.

Feel free to PM me if you have any more questions. Will the company relocate you or will you need a realtor?
 
I have a friend who was born and raised in Pittsurgh, PA.. When she married after college, she and her DH moved to Austin - where they had 2 sons.. They were both junior high school teachers for many years.. Her DH passed a number of years ago, but she still lives there (just turned 72) and would not move back east for anything in the world..

She leads an extremely active life - and from what she writes in her letters to me, there is NO shortage of great things to do in the Austin area - from museums to hiking!

It does get quite warm, but she still prefers that to the cold winters back east..:goodvibes
 
Awh thanks :hug:For all the really helpful and useful replies! Couple of other questions if that's ok? 1. The cost of living? I always find it very reasonably priced in Florida (so so much cheaper than here in UK), I did think that last year the prices in LA were a lot higher. 2. Cost of health insurance? We would prob get this thru DH work, but one of our options is to possibly take my parents with us as I'm a only child, so we would be taking away their only grandchild. Finally! The most important question- how far from WDW???? X
 
Thank you for starting this thread OP! We went to Austin last week for a job interview and it was such a hectic trip I wasnt sure how I felt about Austin the first day. There was like one bad area (where we happened to book our first hotel) and it was awful, but then we checked out & moved into Austin proper and it was awesome! I highly recommend staying at the Raddison if you go to check it out. You can see the bats come out at night (did you hear about the bats?) and the place was beautiful. Do not under any circumstances stay at the "Americas Best Value" in North Austin. Avoid that whole area. :)

The city was very active, lot of healthy walking/biking/running. We also noticed a young liberal hippy type of crowd, which we loved. We are from Mass, so we fit right in. We really enjoyed the city. I am really hoping to get the job I interviewed for!

I would recommend taking a week or two and go see the city. :goodvibes
 
Austin is about a 21 hour drive to WDW-so flying is a must

My friend moved there a couple years ago and was able to buy a home with a lake view-lots of lakes and hills. Its a very musical, artsy city-not as "Western" as other Texas cities-hip , cool very outdoorsy and healthy types-bike paths etc.

If I had to move to texas-it would be the city i would choose.:)
 
We did the drive from Austin to WDW several times with small kids - it was a day and a half - maybe 18 hours for us and we did some long stops for sit down meals.

Cost of living in Austin is probably pretty reasonable compared to UK - it is significantly less than Los Angeles, San Francisco, NY, Chicago... You can find a very comfortable 4+ bedroom home with 2 baths for ~$200K. Ours was just over that amount and was 5 bedrooms with 3 baths and a nice yard.

Like every city, there are lots of areas and everyone loves their area for different reasons. I really would think about how much of a commute you want DH to have. Depending on where you are and where you are going a short commute can take an hour, or a long one can take 20 minutes. As for schools - there is a great mix of public and private schools.

We left because we were not close to family and that became very important to us, so much so that we sold the house and left. So - if you are open to looking a bit outside of town, you can find some great multi-generation family homes or can buy 2 homes for the cost of one.

Austin has a great feel to it, relaxed and small town, but with all the big city conveniences.

Any questions on areas or commutes let me know - we tried all different areas and I may know the pros and cons to consider. I also have some favorite areas that if we return some day I will go back to.

I tell everyone who goes to Austin - eat at Tacodeli on Barton Springs. Have steak frontera fundido. Think of me when you do, we miss it terribly. And if you are going downtown, go to La Traviata.
 
Austin is about a 21 hour drive to WDW-so flying is a must

My friend moved there a couple years ago and was able to buy a home with a lake view-lots of lakes and hills. Its a very musical, artsy city-not as "Western" as other Texas cities-hip , cool very outdoorsy and healthy types-bike paths etc.

If I had to move to texas-it would be the city i would choose.:)

my daughter lives in Austin and her husband has a band that is big in Austin.
I am from New England, and I have to admit my daughter very much dislikes it there...and really wants to move home.
 
Both my brother and I grew up in Houston and attended UT. I loved it there, but my brother loved Austin so much that he never left! If my husband and I ever end up in Texas we are living in Austin! It is consistently rated as one of the top 10 cities in the country right now... It is a great, fun place to live!
 
Austin is nice and most people seem to want to never leave once they move there. It's a liberal pocket in a conservative state which means that I should really live there myself.

The area is pretty with a lot to do but it does get very hot in the summer. The traffic is bad and the prices are high for Texas but I think that this is because of so many people moving there.

Maybe you could come just to check it out?
 
I moved to Austin about 6 years ago now and have really enjoyed my time here. Like most cities, the different areas of town have very different feelings to them. I really like where we live now - southwest Austin (the area known as Oak Hill). It's very convenient to downtown, there is a nice mix of housing (from apartments, older homes, McMansions, etc) - and the traffic is a lot better. Austin has a bad rep for traffic, but compared to other cities I've lived in, it isn't really an issue, but I do like to avoid I-35 (the main north-to-south corridor) at all costs. The northern suburbs have great housing prices and good schools, so they are very popular with families. Although the east side (anything east of I-35) has been going through a transformation, I wouldn't recommend it for families yet - the schools aren't that great and there is a lot of crime.

It gets ridiculously hot here - this summer has been a cool one (95 to 97 degrees all this week) compared to last summer where we had like 60 days straight of 100+ temperatures. That is the thing I hate the most about living here, because it is a very fun outdoors town, but being outside in the summer just sucks. But it stays very nice the rest of the year and it doesn't rain a lot - so if you've ever wanted a backyard pool or a convertible, you're in luck.

There is a lot of family-friendly stuff here in Austin and fairly close by. It is a very educated city so there is a lot of culture for a city this size (ballet, opera, museums, plus the famous music scene). Most people in Austin aren't from Austin, so I don't think you'll be alone in not having a lot of family around. The cost of living here is higher than a lot of places in the south, but still very reasonable (nothing like the northeast or California). It all depends on how you want to spend your money - you could spend $500K for a fixed-up 2 bedroom downtown, get a McMansion with five feet of space between your house and your neighbors, or buy a ranch with 15+ acres. But the median is much closer to $200K for a regular family house. Prices for stuff is very similar to Florida, but home prices are definitely lower.

Schools run from mid-August to late-May, early-June. The major breaks are Thanksgiving (late November), Christmas through New Years, and Spring Break, with a couple of other small holidays thrown in.

Frankly, health care compared to Scotland is probably going to be kind of a shocker. Is there a way your parents could just come stay with you like 6 months out of the year, so they could keep what they have now? Most retired people here get help from the government in the form of Medicare to keep their costs low, but a friend of my parents recently retired and is still 3 years from getting Medicare and their insurance recently was raised from $600to $1200 a month.

Sorry about the long post - feel free to PM me if you have any other specific kind of questions.
 


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