Princeton Guide

Cost of Living in Princeton, Texas

What does it cost to live in Princeton? The short answer: the standard Texas trade — no income tax, paid for by property taxes — with a housing tier that’s value-priced new construction. The details are below.

Housing

Housing in Princeton is overwhelmingly new construction, priced for value on the growth frontier — you get a move-in-ready home for less than the established suburbs charge, in exchange for a longer commute and amenities that are still catching up to the rooftops. Rentals track the same pattern. If the Princeton price tag stretches your budget, the usual move is to look at adjacent towns that share some of the appeal at a lower entry point.

Taxes

The Texas deal applies in full: no state income tax — a genuine raise the day you move from a higher-tax state — paid for by property taxes that run high, commonly around 2% of a home’s assessed value across the area and escrowed into your monthly mortgage payment. Sales tax lands at 8.25%. It’s the property-tax escrow that most newcomers underestimate, so run the full number before you fall for a house.

Utilities and the Rest

Groceries and services sit near the national average — this is a big, competitive market with no small-town markup. Most of Princeton is on the deregulated grid, so you shop for an electric plan (some outlying areas are on a co-op instead), and the summer air-conditioning bill is the seasonal hit every household here absorbs. The other hidden cost is transportation: Princeton is car-dependent, so budget a vehicle (often two), insurance, gas, and the occasional toll road on top of the mortgage. Add those up and you’ve got the real Princeton budget, not the sticker version.

FAQ: Cost of Living in Princeton

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