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Why Park Cities Keeps Outperforming Dallas's Broader Real Estate Market

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Date:
22 May 2026
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In a city known for rapid growth and corporate migration, one pocket of Dallas has quietly maintained a pace of its own. The Park Cities area, encompassing University Park and Highland Park, continues to draw buyers, resist inventory pressure, and post consistent year-over-year appreciation, even as broader Dallas suburbs show signs of cooling. Understanding why requires looking beyond the headlines and into the specific dynamics that make this submarket behave differently from the rest of the metroplex.

Curtis Elliott, Broker Associate and Co-Lead of the Elliott & Elliott Real Estate Group at Dave Perry-Miller Real Estate, has spent nearly two decades working this corridor. Together with his wife, who brings an additional decade of experience, the team closed approximately $55 million in volume last year, with roughly 85% of their business coming from referrals.

Why Dallas Keeps Drawing People In

Before narrowing to the Park Cities specifically, it helps to understand what continues to attract buyers to Dallas at large. The city’s economic diversity is a key factor. Unlike markets built around a single industry, Dallas supports a broad mix of sectors – energy, technology, consumer goods, and hospitality among them. That diversity provides a buffer against sector-specific downturns and sustains demand for housing across price points.

Corporate relocation has been another consistent driver, fueled in part by Texas’s favorable tax environment. Elliott notes that the city’s central geography and access to two major airports make it a practical choice for companies and executives alike.

The Park Cities Difference

Within Dallas, the Park Cities occupy a unique position. Both University Park and Highland Park sit inside Dallas city limits but operate as independent municipalities with their own governance and, critically, their own school district. That school district, one of the top open-enrollment public systems in Texas, is widely cited as the primary reason families target this area and stay once they arrive.

Because the district draws from a geographically limited area, competition for homes remains intense regardless of broader market conditions. “A lot of people who want to get into this particular Highland Park School District don’t have a big choice,” Elliott explains. “So the competition is still pretty fierce on these homes.”

The neighborhood’s physical character adds to its appeal in ways that often surprise newcomers. Tree-lined streets, proximity to Southern Methodist University, easy access to downtown Dallas, and a walkable retail and dining environment create a lifestyle that defies the flat, sprawling image many outsiders associate with Texas. “When people think of Dallas, I think they think of dry suburbs,” Elliott says. “But it’s very green here.”

A Market With No Room to Grow

One of the more significant structural factors shaping the Park Cities is a simple constraint: there is no land left to develop. Every buildable lot has been absorbed. For buyers and investors, that means the only path to new construction is acquiring an existing property and demolishing it.

Bare lots in the area are now trading at close to $2 million and up. That dynamic has driven a steady wave of teardown activity, with older homes being replaced by larger, more modern builds. It has also placed a natural floor under values. “We’ve had continued growth year after year, and we don’t see it stopping, mainly because of the lack of inventory,” Elliott says.

For investors considering the area, the message is straightforward: entry is expensive, but the underlying fundamentals, scarcity, school quality, location, and consistent demand have historically made it one of the more resilient places to deploy capital in Texas.

Buyer Behavior in a Transitional Market

The broader Dallas market has moderated from its peak years, and buyer behavior has adjusted accordingly. The double-digit annual price increases of a few years ago have given way to more measured growth. Buyers, particularly at the entry level, are more deliberate.

Elliott observes that today’s buyers are more cautious, especially those stretching their budgets. They want turnkey properties, fully updated and move-in ready, rather than homes requiring renovation. “They don’t want to do remodeling or updating; they want everything ready to go,” he says.

That preference is showing up clearly in market data. Well-priced, updated homes are still drawing multiple offers. Properties that are overpriced or in need of work are sitting longer. The distinction between the two has become sharper than it was during the pandemic-era frenzy.

On the seller side, expectations have adjusted. Price reductions and modest concessions are more common than they were, though not at levels that suggest distress. “Sellers are more realistic,” Elliott notes. “They’re realizing we’re not getting the nine and twelve percent increases we were getting before.”

Deal Friction and What’s Killing Transactions

Inspection-related terminations have emerged as the most common deal-killer in the current environment, particularly on older homes. Buyers who might have waived or glossed over inspection findings in a hotter market are now scrutinizing reports carefully and, in some cases, walking away.

Cash transactions and pre-underwritten buyers remain a significant presence, especially in the Park Cities. That dynamic raises the bar for financed buyers competing for the same properties. “They have to either have the cash, be pre-underwritten, or be extremely well qualified to compete,” Elliott explains.

For first-time buyers navigating this environment, the path is narrowing. Entry-level pricing in Dallas now starts around $500,000 in some areas, with the practical floor closer to $1 million in many desirable neighborhoods. Interest rate buydowns, where sellers contribute funds to reduce the buyer’s mortgage rate, are becoming a more common tool. VA loans, including jumbo VA products, are also gaining traction for eligible buyers.

Elliott emphasizes that local lender relationships matter more than many buyers realize. Lenders who know the Park Cities market can navigate its quirks more effectively than national institutions. “Local lenders really understand this market and its ins and outs and can help more than national lenders,” he says.

Looking Ahead

As of mid-2026, the Park Cities market shows no meaningful signs of softening. Interest rates remain a variable worth watching, particularly for their effect on affordability at lower price points. But the structural conditions that have historically supported this submarket, limited supply, strong school system, executive-level demand, and proximity to a diversifying urban economy, remain firmly in place.

For buyers considering the area, the window to enter at any given price point tends to close quickly. For those already invested, the long-term case for holding remains intact. And for the broader Dallas market, the Park Cities continue to serve as a useful benchmark: a reminder that location-specific fundamentals often matter more than macro trends.

About the Expert: Curtis Elliott is a Broker Associate and Co-Lead of the Elliott & Elliott Real Estate Group at Dave Perry-Miller Real Estate, focused on the Park Cities area of Dallas, encompassing University Park and Highland Park, with nearly two decades of experience in the corridor.

This article is based on information provided by the expert source cited above. It is intended for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or real estate advice. Readers should conduct their own research and consult qualified professionals before making any real estate or financial decisions.