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Moving from Texas to Minnesota: Cost, Climate & Lifestyle Changes

Illustrated map showing a move from Texas to Minnesota with a moving truck and city skyline icons

The heat. The growth. The feeling that everything is expanding faster than it’s actually improving.

Moving from Texas to Minnesota: What to Expect When You Trade Heat for Four Seasons

Texas is a big state with a lot of variety, so “moving from Texas” can mean very different things depending on where you’re coming from. Houston, Dallas, Austin, San Antonio — each has its own personality and its own cost pressures. But there’s a common thread that keeps showing up in conversations with Texas transplants in the Twin Cities.

The heat. The growth. The feeling that everything is expanding faster than it’s actually improving.

For a growing number of people, Minnesota offers something Texas doesn’t: a slower pace, four actual seasons, and a metro that feels more like a city built for the people who live in it.

Why People Are Leaving Texas for Minnesota

This one surprises some people. Texas has been a top relocation destination for years — and it still is. So why does traffic flow the other way?

A few patterns that come up regularly:

  • Heat fatigue. Summers in Dallas, Houston, and San Antonio are brutal. Triple-digit heat from May through October with limited outdoor relief wears on people over time. For people who want to be outside and active year-round, Minnesota’s climate — cold winters included — often ends up feeling more livable.
  • Rising housing costs. Austin especially has seen dramatic home price appreciation. Dallas and Houston aren’t far behind in competitive corridors. The gap between Texas and other markets has narrowed significantly in recent years.
  • Job relocation. Minnesota has significant corporate employment in healthcare, finance, technology, food and ag, and retail. For people following career opportunities, the Twin Cities are a legitimate destination.
  • Political and lifestyle alignment. The Twin Cities have a strong progressive and LGBTQ+ community, a robust arts scene, and a culture that aligns with certain values and priorities that can feel harder to find in parts of Texas.

💰 Cost of Living: Twin Cities vs Texas

Home Prices

The comparison here really depends on which Texas market you’re coming from.

  • Twin Cities median: ~$350,000–$400,000
  • Austin metro: median prices have been $450,000–$550,000+ in recent years
  • Dallas / Fort Worth: often $380,000–$500,000 in desirable suburbs
  • Houston: generally more affordable, comparable to Twin Cities in many areas
  • San Antonio: often lower, in the $280,000–$360,000 range

Rent

Rental costs in the Twin Cities are competitive with most Texas markets.

    • 1-bedroom (Twin Cities): $1,200–$1,800/month
    • 1-bedroom (Austin): $1,400–$2,000/month
    • 1-bedroom (Dallas): $1,200–$1,800/month
    • 1-bedroom (Houston): $1,000–$1,600/month

The big difference: Texas has no state income tax. Minnesota does. That’s a real consideration when you’re comparing total financial picture, especially at higher income levels. What many people find, though, is that the overall lifestyle costs, stability, and quality of public services in Minnesota balance the equation more than the income tax line suggests on paper.

Check out the full cost of living breakdown for the Twin Cities to see how all the categories compare.

Find out how much home you can afford in the Twin Cities

Use our home loan calculator to estimate your total mortgage payment, including taxes and insurance. Simply enter the price of the home, your down payment, and details about the home loan, to calculate your mortgage payment, schedule, and more.

❄️ Weather: The Honest Conversation

Minneapolis skyline in winter with snow and Mississippi River at sunset
Winter in Minneapolis featuring the skyline, Mississippi River, and snow-covered cityscape.

Obviously the biggest adjustment

It’s not a small one.

Minnesota winters are genuinely cold. January averages around 23°F with wind chills that can push well below zero. Snow accumulates. It stays.

Coming from Texas, this is a real shift in how you live your day-to-day life from November through March.

What most Texas transplants say after their first winter:

The cold is real, but the city handles it well. Roads get cleared. Life doesn’t stop. You buy better gear than you’ve ever owned before, and after a few months you develop a routine. It’s more manageable than they expected.

What they don’t expect:

How good the rest of the year is.

Spring and summer in Minnesota are genuinely excellent — comfortable temperatures, low humidity compared to Houston or Dallas, long daylight hours, and access to lakes and trails everywhere you look. For people who love being outside but have been hiding from Texas summers, it’s a revelation.

What the trade-off actually looks like:

  • Texas: 6+ months of oppressive heat, 2 months of perfect weather, mild winters
  • Minnesota: 4 months of real winter, 4 months of outstanding warm weather, 4 months in between

A lot of people find the Minnesota version more balanced.

Check out our complete Minnesota weather guide for a full breakdown.

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🏡 Finding Your Neighborhood

Texas is a state of big spaces and wide streets. The Twin Cities have that in some areas — but also offer walkable, dense urban neighborhoods that Texas cities generally don’t.

Coming from Austin: You’ll probably find your people in Northeast Minneapolis, Seward, or Longfellow. Music, food, progressive community, neighborhood bars, walkability.

Coming from Dallas suburbs: Look at Eden Prairie, Woodbury, Plymouth, or Maple Grove. Newer construction, great schools, easy highway access, suburban comfort with city proximity.

Coming from Houston: The diversity in the Twin Cities is real. Areas like Richfield, and parts of south Minneapolis and St. Paul have significant cultural variety and strong community roots.

Want something different from where you were: Downtown Minneapolis, Loring Park, or North Loop offer genuine urban density that Texas cities rarely have close to home.

Thinking About Making the Move?

The Twin Cities offer a lot of opportunity.If you’re starting to think seriously about making a move, the best place to start is with a clear plan.

🏙️ What Stays the Same

The things that make Texas cities appealing — strong job markets, relatively new housing stock, good food culture, a sense of growth and momentum — exist in the Twin Cities too. The scale is different, but the energy is similar in a lot of ways.

What changes is pace, temperature, and the nature of outdoor life. For many Texas transplants, that trade-off is exactly what they were looking for.

Find your place in the Twin Cities

Browse homes in LGBTQ-friendly neighborhoods across Minneapolis and the Twin Cities.

Keep Exploring Your Move

Get the full breakdown of neighborhoods, pricing, and what to expect when moving to the Twin Cities.

Moving from one of these states?

Checkout our other blogs with specific insights to your current state, from lifestyle differences to housing costs and day-to-day living in the Twin Cities.

MKT Real Estate Advisors is a top-producing real estate team with Coldwell Banker Realty, dedicated to helping clients buy, sell, and invest with confidence.

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