Investor Intelligence — Updated 2026

Temple vs Killeen for Real Estate Investors:
Which Market Actually Wins?

I've invested in both. Here's the data — and my honest take.

If you're an out-of-state investor looking at Central Texas, you've probably already narrowed it down to two cities: Temple and Killeen. They sit 30 minutes apart on I-14, they share the same MSA, and on paper they look similar. But they are fundamentally different investment markets.

Killeen is a cash flow machine powered by Fort Cavazos, the largest active-duty military installation in the western hemisphere. Temple is a long-term appreciation play anchored by Baylor Scott & White Medical Center, the largest non-profit healthcare system in Texas. One gives you higher monthly income today. The other gives you more exit strategies and equity growth over time.

I'm Taylor Dasch with EG Realty — I'm a licensed agent and active investor with $27M+ in transactions across flips, BRRRR, buy-and-hold, and mid-term rentals in both markets. Here's the head-to-head comparison so you can decide which one fits your portfolio.


How Do the Numbers Compare?

Here's where the two markets stand as of late 2025. The gap in entry price is the first thing every investor notices — but it's the downstream effects of that gap that actually determine your returns.

Temple Median Price
$289,900
$165/sq ft
Killeen Median Price
$235,000
$137/sq ft
Temple Median Rent
$1,525
/month
Killeen Median Rent
$1,300
/month
MetricTempleKilleenBeltonHarker Heights
Median List Price$289,900$235,000$360,155$329,450
Price per Sq Ft$165$137$178$150
Median Monthly Rent$1,525$1,300$1,747$1,595
Typical Cap Rate (SFR)5–7%6–8.5%5–6%5–7%
Median Days on Market918510482
Active Inventory1,6001,200670260
Primary Demand DriverBSW Medical (7,000+ jobs)Fort Cavazos (Military)School District / LakeMilitary Officers / Retail

Who's Renting in Each Market?

The tenant base is where these two markets diverge the most — and where most out-of-state investors don't do enough homework before buying.

Killeen tenants are predominantly military. Service members receive a Basic Allowance for Housing (BAH) that essentially guarantees rent payment — it's government-backed income. The tradeoff is turnover. Military families rotate every 2–3 years, which means more frequent make-ready costs, leasing fees, and brief vacancy windows between tenants. With that said, the pipeline never stops. Fort Cavazos cycles thousands of service members in and out every year, so demand stays consistent.

Temple tenants are predominantly medical professionals. Nurses, technicians, residents, and support staff at Baylor Scott & White and the VA Hospital. These tenants tend to stay longer — many of my clients have had the same tenant since closing. The challenge is that once you get above $1,500/month in rent, it can take a little longer to place a tenant because medical professionals in that income range often choose to buy instead of rent.

Taylor Dasch
Taylor's Take
Taylor Dasch · EG Realty

Temple wins on tenant quality in my experience. Less turnover, tenants who take better care of the property, and more stable long-term occupancy. But Killeen wins on speed of placement — the military pipeline fills vacancies fast, especially under $1,500/month. I've seen Killeen units lease within a week of listing. In Temple above $1,500, budget two to three weeks.


Cash Flow vs Appreciation: What Does the Data Show?

Killeen will almost always beat Temple on cash flow. The math is straightforward: lower purchase price means a lower mortgage payment, and strong rental demand means consistent income. You can get into the Killeen market at $150K–$180K for a solid 3-bed brick/slab home that rents for $1,300–$1,500/month. That's hard to replicate in Temple at those price points.

Temple wins on appreciation — and it's not close historically. Temple's housing stock is more owner-occupied, which drives prices up. Killeen is more investor-owned, which compresses values. Temple also benefits from a more diversified employer base: Baylor Scott & White, the VA, Wilsonart International (1,300+ employees), McLane Company (1,000+ employees), and H-E-B Distribution (900+ employees). When your local economy doesn't depend on a single federal budget line item, your property values are more resilient.

FactorTempleKilleen
Monthly Cash FlowModerateHigher (lower entry cost)
Long-Term AppreciationStronger (owner-occupied demand)Lower (investor-heavy market)
Tenant StabilityLong-term medical professionals2-3 year military rotations
Exit StrategiesFlip, BRRRR, retail resale, MTRRental hold, VA buyer resale
Make-Ready CostsLower (less turnover)Higher (frequent rotation)
Vacancy RiskLowVery Low (BAH pipeline)
Taylor Dasch
Taylor's Take
Taylor Dasch · EG Realty

I like Temple because you still get cash flow AND you have more exit strategies. I've needed that flexibility — I've been on Plan D on a deal before and still came out fine because Temple gives you options. If you do a tight rehab in Killeen and need to pivot, the exit is harder. In Temple, you can flip it, BRRRR it, rent it long-term, convert to mid-term for travel nurses, or sell to a retail buyer. That flexibility has saved me real money on deals that didn't go according to plan.


What Are the Real Carrying Costs?

Texas has no state income tax — the tradeoff is property taxes. Bell County (which covers both Temple and Killeen) has an effective rate of 1.88%, which is actually competitive compared to the major metros.

CountyEffective Tax RateAnnual Tax on $300K Home
Bell County (Temple/Killeen)1.88%$5,640
Travis County (Austin)1.98%$5,940
Bexar County (San Antonio)2.12%$6,360
Dallas County2.18%$6,540
Harris County (Houston)2.31%$6,930

Insurance is another factor investors underestimate. The Temple/Killeen area averages about $3,400/year for homeowners insurance — significantly less than coastal Texas cities. Houston averages $8,700 and Corpus Christi hits $13,000. Being inland eliminates the hurricane premium that eats into returns in Gulf markets.

Taylor Dasch
Taylor's Take
Taylor Dasch · EG Realty

Out-of-state investors always ask me about taxes first. Yes, Texas property taxes are higher than some states — but run the total math. No state income tax on your rental income, no state capital gains tax when you sell, and insurance costs that are half of what you'd pay in Houston or on the coast. On a $300K property, you're paying $1,290 less per year in taxes than you would in Houston's Harris County. That's over $100/month straight to your bottom line.


Where Should You Buy in Each Market?

Top Neighborhoods in Temple

Appreciation Play

West Temple / West Adams

Fastest-growing area. Belton ISD zoning. Proximity to Lake Belton and Austin commute corridor. Modern homes, strong resale demand from medical professionals.

Cash Flow + Proximity

Western Hills

5-7 minutes to Baylor Scott & White. Older homes with renovation upside. Highest "dirt value" in Temple due to scarcity of proximity to the medical district.

New Build Value

South Pointe (76504)

Stylecraft new builds from $230K-$300K. $10/mo HOA, no PID tax. 7 minutes to BSW. Current incentives include 5% fixed rate or $20K flex cash.

Value Play

Canyon Creek Corridor

Maximum square footage for the dollar. Pier & beam homes with house-hack and BRRRR potential. 8-10 minute commute to BSW. Lower price points than West Temple.

Top Neighborhoods in Killeen

Premium Suburb

Harker Heights

Functions as Killeen's executive suburb. Higher rents ($1,595 median), strong demand from military officers and contractors. Best quality of life in the Killeen market.

Family-Friendly

Yowell Ranch

Modern community with pools and trails. Median homes around $275K. Popular with E-6+ military families who want neighborhood amenities and newer construction.

Ground Floor

Nolanville

Emerging community adjacent to Killeen. Lower entry prices with room for growth as infrastructure develops. Ideal for investors who want to get in early.

Officer Housing

White Rock Estates

Spacious homes and larger lots averaging around $320K. Attracts officer-class military personnel and higher BAH brackets. Lower turnover than base-adjacent areas.

Taylor Dasch
Taylor's Take
Taylor Dasch · EG Realty

A lot of investors are nervous about pier and beam homes — I get it. But in Temple, pier and beam is where you find the best deals. They're cheaper to purchase, easier to rehab than people think (leveling is not as expensive as the internet makes it sound), and they rent extremely well. If you want brick slab and zero foundation anxiety, Killeen has great options in the $150K–$180K range. Both strategies work — just depends on your comfort level and how hands-on you want to be.


Two Strategies for Building Wealth in Both Markets

You don't have to pick one or the other. Here are two strategies I've seen work — and used myself.

Strategy 1

Cash Flow in Killeen → Flips in Temple

Start by acquiring cash-flowing rentals in Killeen at the $150K–$180K price point. Build up monthly income. Then use that cash flow cushion to take on flips in Temple, where the average profit runs $30,000–$50,000 per deal. The Killeen rentals provide stability while the Temple flips accelerate your equity growth.

Best for: Investors who want to replace W-2 income first, then scale into active deals.

Strategy 2

Flip Capital → Scale Into Apartments

Start flipping in Temple where the resale buyer pool is deeper and exit strategies are more flexible. Reinvest flip profits into the next deal instead of holding. Stack capital until you can acquire a small multifamily or apartment complex in either market. Temple and Killeen both have strong multifamily fundamentals — Killeen for volume, Temple for stability.

Best for: Investors with a 3–5 year horizon who want to scale into commercial multifamily.

Taylor Dasch
Taylor's Take
Taylor Dasch · EG Realty

If I was starting over today with zero properties, I'd do Strategy 1. Get the cash flowing assets in Killeen first so you have income while you learn the flip game. The biggest mistake I see new investors make is jumping straight into flips without a cash flow safety net. The Killeen rentals give you that cushion while you figure out your process in Temple. I just had an investor who wholesaled a deal in Temple and did very well on it — and he had Killeen rentals covering his bills the whole time.


How Does Central Texas Compare to Austin, Dallas, and Houston?

If you're looking at Texas real estate, you've probably priced out Austin already. Here's how Temple-Killeen stacks up against the major metros.

MarketPrimary AppealPrimary Risk
Temple-KilleenHigh yields, medical + military demandSlower appreciation than tech hubs
AustinTech growth, cultural capitalCompressed cap rates, luxury oversupply
DFWCorporate relocations, logisticsHigh property taxes, urban density
HoustonEnergy sector, port economyHurricane insurance ($8,700+ avg), flood risk
San AntonioMilitary + medical, tourism baseHigher tax rate (2.12%), slower rent growth

Austin's median home price is nearly double Temple's ($543K vs $290K) and cap rates have compressed to the point where cash flow is almost impossible without significant capital. Temple-Killeen gives you the I-35 corridor growth at a fraction of the cost — and Redfin data shows that Austin buyers are the #1 source searching for Temple homes. The spillover is already happening.


THE BOTTOM LINE

If your priority is maximum monthly cash flow and you want to scale a portfolio of rentals quickly, Killeen is your market. Lower entry prices, BAH-backed tenants, and a rental pipeline that never stops.

If your priority is long-term wealth building with tenant stability, stronger appreciation, and multiple exit strategies, Temple is your market. You still get cash flow — just paired with more flexibility if your plan needs to change.

The smartest investors I work with? They own in both.


Frequently Asked Questions

Is Temple or Killeen better for real estate investors?
It depends on your strategy. Killeen offers lower entry prices ($235K median vs $290K in Temple) and stronger cash flow driven by military rental demand near Fort Cavazos. Temple offers better long-term appreciation, higher-quality tenants (Baylor Scott & White medical professionals), and more exit strategies including flips. Many investors build portfolios in both markets to balance cash flow and appreciation.
What are the typical cap rates in Temple vs Killeen?
Temple single-family rentals typically yield 5–7% cap rates, while Killeen properties often achieve 6–8.5% cap rates due to lower purchase prices and strong military-driven rental demand. Keep in mind that Killeen operating expenses can run higher due to more frequent tenant turnover as military families rotate every 2–3 years.
What is the average rent in Temple and Killeen TX?
As of late 2025, the median monthly rent in Temple is approximately $1,525 and in Killeen approximately $1,300. Harker Heights rents average $1,595 and Belton averages $1,747. Rental demand in Killeen is driven by Fort Cavazos military personnel using BAH (Basic Allowance for Housing), while Temple demand is driven by Baylor Scott & White and VA Hospital employees.
What are the property taxes in Bell County?
Bell County has an effective property tax rate of approximately 1.88%, which is lower than Austin's Travis County (1.98%), Dallas County (2.18%), Houston's Harris County (2.31%), and San Antonio's Bexar County (2.12%). On a $300,000 home, that equals roughly $5,640 annually — significantly less than comparable properties in major Texas metros.
Can out-of-state investors buy rental property in Temple or Killeen?
Yes. Texas has no state income tax and both markets have strong property management options for remote investors. Many of my investor clients purchase properties remotely using video walkthroughs, local inspections, and professional management. DSCR loans are widely available for investors who want to qualify based on the property's income rather than personal W-2 income.

Want Me to Run Numbers on a Specific Property?

I'm Taylor Dasch with EG Realty — an active investor with $27M+ in transactions across Temple, Killeen, and Bell County. I run cash flow analyses for my investor clients on every property and I'll tell you honestly whether a deal works or doesn't.

See My Investor Resources

Call or Text: (254) 718-4249

Data sources: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Zillow, Redfin, Realtor.com, Bell County Appraisal District, Texas Real Estate Research Center. Market data as of Q4 2025.
Taylor Dasch | EG Realty | templetxhomes.net | Temple, TX