Best Neighborhoods in Houston, TX
4 neighborhoods ranked by safety, walkability, affordability, and quality of life — powered by real data from the US Census, FBI, EPA, and Walk Score.
Best Neighborhoods in Houston, TX — Key Takeaways
The best neighborhood in Houston is Montrose with a Kurby Score of 79/100. Houston has 4 neighborhoods ranked by quality of life data. The safest neighborhood is Montrose with a violent crime rate of 4.5 per 1,000 residents. The most affordable is Midtown Houston with a median home value of $310,000. The most walkable is Montrose with a Walk Score of 96/100.
Houston has a population of 2,304,580, a median household income of $53,600, an unemployment rate of 4.3%. The median home value citywide is $230,000, which is 18% below the national average of $281,900.
Data sourced from the US Census Bureau, FBI Crime Data Explorer, EPA AirNow, Walk Score, and FEMA. Last updated: March 2026.
Top 3 Neighborhoods
| # | Neighborhood | Kurby Score | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Montrose | 79 | ||
| The Heights | 77 | ||
| River Oaks | 71 | ||
4 | Midtown Houston | 68 |
Rankings by Category
Top 5 neighborhoods in Houston for each quality-of-life metric.
Lowest violent crime rate
- 4.5 per 1K
- 4.5 per 1K
- 4.5 per 1K
- 4.5 per 1K
Highest Walk Score
- 96/100
- 94/100
- 88/100
- 20/100
Lowest median home value
- $310,000
- $435,000
- $520,000
- $1,250,000
Lowest unemployment rate
- 4.3%
- 4.3%
- 4.3%
- 4.3%
Highest median household income
- $250,001
- $177,583
- $127,409
- $101,522
Lowest Air Quality Index
- AQI 57
- AQI 57
- AQI 57
- AQI 57
Most nearby schools
- 50 schools
- 50 schools
Neighborhoods are ranked using the Kurby Score, a composite quality-of-life index that evaluates seven weighted categories based on publicly available data:
- Affordability
- 20% weight
- Walkability & Transit
- 15% weight
- Safety
- 15% weight
- Environment
- 15% weight
- Housing Market
- 15% weight
- Education
- 10% weight
- Economy
- 10% weight
Each category incorporates multiple data points. For example, Safety uses both violent and property crime rates; Environment considers air quality (AQI), noise levels, climate risk, and flood zone status; Housing Market factors in vacancy rates, homeownership rates, and effective tax rates.
Data Sources: US Census Bureau American Community Survey (ACS) 5-Year Estimates, FBI Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR), EPA AirNow, Walk Score, DOT National Transportation Noise Map, FEMA National Flood Hazard Layer, Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), and EIA Electricity Data. All data is updated on a rolling basis as new government releases become available.