These Three Texas Cities Are Among Nation's Top 10 'Boomtowns"
Three of the nation’s fastest-growing and most prosperous cities are in Texas, according to a new ranking. Denton, New Braunfels and Round Rock are considered American “boomtowns” in a study by financial advisory firm SmartAsset. Using data from the U.S. Census Bureau, the firm examined 500 cities and ranked them based on positive trends in employment, business creation, population growth, housing growth and household income.
Denton came in second, trailing only Longmont, Colo. It’s known as a college town, serving as the home of the University of North Texas and Texas Woman’s University, and often praised for its music culture. From 2014 to 2018, Denton’s population grew 8% and household income rose 36%. Denton County’s median household income sits at around $86,000 — a decent bit above the national median of almost $62,000. Since August 2018, the city’s unemployment rate has fallen 0.2%. SmartAsset also ranked Denton as one of the most affordable cities in the U.S. with great school districts this year.
Other Dallas-Fort Worth cities making the top 50 were Frisco (13th), McKinney (14th), Flower Mound (24th) and Allen (37th). All posted high five-year growth rates in the number of local businesses and local housing units. Dallas and Fort Worth also performed well, ranking 63rd and 69th. Texas has long been home to some of America’s iconic boomtowns, Houston being one of those during the 1950s when it emerged as an epicenter of the energy industry. Earlier this year, new census data showed Dallas-Fort Worth gained more new residents than any metropolitan area in the country, adding more than 1 million people from 2010 to 2018.
The region's population now tops 7.5 million, solidifying North Texas' ranking as the nation's fourth-largest metro area. It trails only New York, Los Angeles and Chicago, all of which are losing residents.
Texas gained more than 3.5 million people in the eight-year period. That’s the equivalent of 1,000 new residents a day — with a third of those settling down in D-FW...