The West Temple Dispatch
West Temple runs roughly 314 active listings with a median list price of $304,900, about $169 per square foot, and a median 79 days on market. Homes that actually closed in the trailing 90 days sold at a $289,000 median — about 5% above Temple's citywide $275,000. So the short version: West Temple is Temple's newer, school-driven, slightly more expensive west side — but it is not one uniform market. This guide prices every west-side subdivision instead of lumping them together, because West Temple is really two different markets, and which one you buy in changes your price, your likely school district, and your commute to Baylor Scott & White. Updated · May 2026 · Verify current figures before writing an offer.
Is West Temple a good area to buy in?
Yes — for the right buyer. West Temple is the cleanest starting point in Temple if newer construction and a Belton-leaning school zone are what you're after, and it can be a genuine value if you buy an older inner-west home instead of a new build. The tradeoff is price: the West Temple median sold home runs about 5% over Temple's citywide median, and the newest growth-corridor subdivisions push $185+ per square foot. It is not the cheapest move in Temple, and it is not the closest move to Fort Hood. One thing to settle early: West Temple is not uniformly one school district — newer pockets commonly zone to Belton ISD while older inner-west streets are often Temple ISD.
What does West Temple cost?
The "median" hides the real spread. Here's what's listed now, then what's actually closing.
West Temple is not one price. The zone spans a 1962 ranch in Western Hills near $130/sf and a new Lakewood Ranch build over $185/sf, so the median hides the real spread. Below are the numbers straight from Bell County MLS — first what's listed now, then what's actually closing.
West Temple zone composite · Bell County MLS · May 2026. Sparklines illustrative of direction, not exact monthly values.
Active listings by community
| Community | Active | Median list | $/sf | Med sqft | Year built | DOM |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lake Pointe | 47 | $285,000 | $147 | 1,930 | 2013–24 | 49 |
| Hills of Westwood | 50 | $332,000 | $173 | 1,917 | 2002–25 | 147 |
| Parks at Westfield | 48 | $267,000 | $172 | 1,578 | 2005–26 | 83 |
| Hartrick | 36 | $308,450 | $184 | 2,039 | 2018–26 | 117 |
| Lakewood Ranch | 31 | $405,000 | $186 | 2,193 | 1996–26 | 165 |
| Western Hills | 28 | $260,875 | $134 | 1,840 | 1962–94 | 42 |
| Sage Meadows | 22 | $275,000 | $113 | 2,430 | 2004–17 | 45 |
| Tanglewood | 23 | $429,000 | $203 | 2,150 | 1993–26 | 69 |
| Carriage House Trails | 16 | $307,000 | $164 | 1,892 | 2005–18 | 69 |
| Wildflower Country Club | 11 | $490,000 | $184 | 2,384 | 1989–26 | 106 |
| Ridgewood | 2 | $287,500 | $139 | 2,064 | 1973–75 | 162 |
| West Temple total | 314 | $304,900 | $169 | 1,920 | — | 79 |
Sold, trailing 90 days — what buyers actually paid
| Community | Sold | Median sold | $/sf |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lake Pointe | 22 | $263,500 | $137 |
| Hills of Westwood | 24 | $302,000 | $168 |
| Parks at Westfield | 29 | $270,000 | $171 |
| Hartrick | 21 | $306,000 | $173 |
| Lakewood Ranch | 17 | $432,000 | $185 |
| Western Hills | 13 | $235,000 | $124 |
| Sage Meadows | 11 | $267,000 | $112 |
| Tanglewood | 12 | $410,000 | $196 |
| Carriage House Trails | 4 | $320,000 | $165 |
| West Temple sold (90d) | 93 | $289,000 | ~$165 |
Per-community sold counts above are drawn from a wider 180-day window for stability on thin pockets; the zone-level $289,000 median and the citywide comparison below use the same trailing-90-day window so the premium is apples-to-apples.
"The numbers don't negotiate. They just tell you where you stand."The Dasch reading of the tape
What the gap tells you: over the trailing 90 days, the West Temple median sold of $289,000 (n≈93) sits about 5.1% above Temple's citywide median sold of $275,000 (n≈384, same 90-day window). Stretch the window to 180 days and the gap widens to roughly 7%. That premium is the price of newer homes and school-zone demand. You are paying for it — the data says so plainly.
Data is from Bell County MLS via the agent's market tracker. Active = 314 listings, City = Temple, pulled 2026-05-23. Sold = closed sales, City = Temple, close date within the stated trailing window. "West Temple" here is the aggregate of: Lake Pointe, Hills of Westwood, Parks at Westfield, Hartrick, Lakewood Ranch, Western Hills, Sage Meadows, Tanglewood, Carriage House Trails, Wildflower Country Club, and Ridgewood. It is a market convention used by local buyers and agents — not an official municipal boundary. Verify current data before relying on it.
Why West Temple is really two markets.
The single most useful thing to understand about West Temple — and almost no listing site will tell you.
It's two completely different buys under one zone name. Plot every subdivision by what year it was built and what it costs per square foot, and the zone splits cleanly into a value side and a growth corridor.
West Temple subdivisions — plotted by build year × $/sf
Each circle is a subdivision; size roughly tracks active inventory count. Build-year position uses the median of the year-built range. Read it like a yield curve: the value side clusters bottom-left, the growth corridor stretches up and right.
The old inner-west
Western Hills (1962–94, $134/sf), Ridgewood (1973–75, $139/sf), and the mature edges of Wildflower Country Club. Established, tree-lined streets close to the hospital district. You get the most house for the money here — but you also inherit the foundation question that comes with any pre-2000 slab on Central Texas clay, and on much of the older inner-west, Temple ISD rather than Belton ISD.
The new growth corridor
Lakewood Ranch ($186/sf), Hartrick ($184/sf), Hills of Westwood ($173/sf), Parks at Westfield ($172/sf), Carriage House Trails, and Sage Meadows — mostly built 2000s through 2026, off the West Adams corridor pushing toward Belton. Newer construction, newer roofs and mechanicals, and the pockets that commonly zone to Belton ISD (confirm by address). You pay a higher per-foot price for that.
So when someone says "we want West Temple," the right next question is which West Temple. A $260,000 Western Hills home and a $405,000 Lakewood Ranch home are both "West Temple" and have almost nothing in common — different decade, different likely district, different commute, different inspection list.


Same zone name. Different decade, different likely district, different inspection list. That's the split.
Which school district is West Temple in?
The area name does not decide your zone — the parcel does.
Here is where buyers get burned, so read this carefully: West Temple is not uniformly one school district, and the area name does not decide your zone — the parcel does.
The general pattern: newer west-side communities commonly zone to Belton ISD; older inner-west pockets are often Temple ISD; and several are address-specific.
- Newer growth corridor (Lakewood Ranch, Hartrick, Parks at Westfield, much of Lake Pointe): commonly Belton ISD — this is the school draw that powers a lot of West Temple demand. "Commonly" is not "always"; confirm the street.
- Older inner-west (Western Hills, Ridgewood, 1960s–90s pockets): often Temple ISD.
- Canyon Creek: Temple ISD — a frequent surprise for buyers who assume "west = Belton."
- Hills of Westwood and Bella Terra: split by address. Two homes on different streets in the same subdivision can land in different districts.
- Parts of the far west edge can fall into Academy ISD depending on the parcel.
Never buy off the listing's ISD field.
The MLS / Zillow "school district" field is entered by the listing agent and is frequently wrong on boundary parcels. Pull the Belton ISD (or Temple ISD) attendance-zone map for the exact street address, or have your agent confirm it with the district, before you write the offer. If schools are the reason you're moving, this is the one check you cannot skip. School boundaries change; verify the current attendance map for your address.
How far is West Temple from BSW, I-35, and Fort Hood?
The commute math has a twist most buyers get wrong.
If you're relocating for a Baylor Scott & White job, the commute math has a twist most buyers get wrong. Notice the commute runs backwards from price — the cheaper, older Western Hills is the closest to BSW; the newer, more expensive outer-west is the farthest.

The BSW paradox — minutes to hospital vs. $/sf paid
Approx., Wed 8am traffic-aware via Google Maps · verify for your address.
Put rough numbers on it: ~8 min each way × 2 trips × ~235 working days ≈ 63 hours a year in the car (call it ~60 hours), off-peak — shift-change traffic can push it higher. And you'd be paying more per foot for the privilege. That's not an argument against new construction — it's an argument for knowing the trade you're making. If a short hospital commute is the priority, the inner-west is mathematically the better answer.
On Fort Hood: West Temple sits 33–38 minutes from the main gate. That's a real commute. If you're PCS'ing or working on post, Killeen and Harker Heights will almost always serve you better — this zone is built for hospital-district and school-zone families, not a daily Fort Hood drive.
Hartrick · 2022 build"You aren't buying a zone. You're buying a street, a slab, and a school — in that order."
What do the West Temple subdivisions actually cost?
First the ladder — every pocket on one rule, by $/sf. Then the folio of each, ordered low to high.
The price ladder — $/sf, side by side
Bars scaled $100–$210/sf. Color indicates value side (rust) vs. growth corridor (emerald). Medians: Bell County MLS · May 2026.
The folio — every pocket, in detail

Western Hills
The value anchor of the inner-west and the fastest-moving older pocket. Most house per dollar, closest to BSW (~9 min). Because the stock is pre-2000, budget for an engineered foundation inspection, and confirm the school zone (often Temple ISD) for the exact address.
Western Hills guide →
Sage Meadows
The most square footage per dollar in all of West Temple — 2,430 median sqft at $113/sf. The play for buyers who want space over high-end finish, and it moves fast.
Sage Meadows guide →
Lake Pointe
The newer-construction entry point: lower per-foot price for recent builds, deep inventory, and reasonable days on market. A common landing spot for first-time relocation buyers; much of it commonly zones to Belton ISD, but confirm the street.
Lake Pointe guide →
Ridgewood
Tiny, older inner-west pocket. Thin inventory, larger lots, established trees — same pre-2000 foundation and ISD-verify cautions as Western Hills.

Carriage House Trails
Mid-2000s growth-corridor product priced in the middle of the zone. Solid newer-but-not-brand-new option.
Carriage House guide →
Hartrick (Ranch · Valley · Crossing)
One of the newest corridors — most homes are 2018+. Higher per-foot price and a longer 117-day market, which is leverage for a patient buyer. Newer pockets here commonly lean Belton ISD; confirm the parcel.

Hills of Westwood
Largest active inventory in the zone and a slow 147-day market — strong negotiating position. The catch: school district splits by address here, so confirm the parcel before you fall for a home.

Tanglewood
A higher-end West Temple pocket with the top per-foot price in the zone. Wide build range — newer homes alongside 1990s stock, so older Tanglewood homes fall under the same pre-2000 inspection caution.

Lakewood Ranch
The flagship of the new growth corridor and the priciest large pocket. Mostly newer builds and school-zone demand, with the longest market at 165 days — meaningful room to negotiate on the right home. Note the build range starts in 1996, so a small share of older homes here still warrant the pre-2000 foundation check.

Wildflower Country Club
Golf-course-adjacent, the highest median list in West Temple. Wide build range; the older sections (late-1980s–90s) fall under the inner-west foundation/ISD-verify category, the newer ones don't.

Parks at Westfield
Affordable-newer with deep inventory and smaller footprints (1,578 median sqft) — efficient newer homes for buyers who want Belton-leaning schools without the Lakewood Ranch price. Confirm the zone by address.
Parks at Westfield guide →Also in the west orbit: Canyon Creek (Temple ISD), Dawson Ranch, and Three Creeks.
What should you watch out for?
Honest cautions, because this is where buyers lose money or get surprised.
- Foundation diligence is about age, not address. Any pre-2000 home on Central Texas clay can move with the soil — concentrated in West Temple in Western Hills (1962–94), Ridgewood, the older River Oaks Circle pocket, and the older sections of Wildflower and Tanglewood. Budget for an engineered structural inspection there, not just a general one. Post-2000 growth-corridor stock carries lower but not zero risk; a standard inspection with a slab-and-drainage check is usually enough.
- The ISD verify-trap. Covered above and worth repeating: do not trust the listing's school-district field. Confirm the attendance zone for the exact address. Canyon Creek is Temple ISD; Hills of Westwood and Bella Terra split by parcel; "newer west = Belton" is a tendency, not a guarantee.
- Premium-pocket days-on-market. Lakewood Ranch (165 DOM), Hills of Westwood (147), Ridgewood (162), Hartrick (117) sit on the market. That's negotiating room — but it also means resale can be slower if you have to move quickly. Where homes sit, you negotiate; where they move (Western Hills 42, Sage Meadows 45, Lake Pointe 49), you don't.
- You pay more here — that's real. West Temple's median sold runs about 5% over Temple citywide on a same-window basis. If your only goal is the most house for the lowest price and schools aren't the driver, South Temple often gives you more square footage per dollar. West Temple's premium buys newer stock and Belton-leaning schools — make sure that's what you actually want.
West Temple vs South Temple: which fits you?
The two zones solve different problems. The honest split.
In plain terms: West Temple is usually newer and, in its newer pockets, commonly tied to Belton ISD. South Temple is usually better for BSW access, established neighborhoods, and buyers who want more house for the price. West Temple is not always the cheapest move, but it's often the cleanest starting point if a Belton-leaning school zone matters — provided you confirm the zone for the specific address rather than assuming it from the area name.
Where I'd actually look in West Temple, by buyer type.
After 100+ closings in this market.
The matchups
- BSW family where schools are the point: Parks at Westfield or Lake Pointe for value, Lakewood Ranch if the budget's there — but confirm the attendance zone on the exact address first. "Newer west leans Belton" is a starting assumption, not a closing one.
- BSW nurse or physician who wants the shortest commute: an older Western Hills home, eyes open on the foundation inspection. ~9 minutes to the hospital beats a 17-minute newer build, and you'll pay less per foot.
- Most space for the money, finish secondary: Sage Meadows — $113/sf and 2,430 median sqft is the best square-footage value in the zone.
- Patient buyer who wants negotiating leverage: target the slow pockets — Lakewood Ranch (165 DOM), Hills of Westwood (147), Hartrick (117). Time on market is your friend there.
Credibility note: ranked #28 of 2,013 Bell County agents (top ~1.4%) by closed production; $30M+ closed across 100+ transactions. Rankings reflect a specific provider and period — ask for the current source if it matters to your decision.
Common questions buyers actually ask.
Direct answers, no filler.
Q.01Is West Temple a good place to live?+
Yes, especially for families who want newer homes and a Belton-leaning school zone and don't mind a modest price premium. West Temple's median sold runs about 5% over Temple citywide on a same-window basis (Bell County MLS, May 2026). It's the cleanest starting point if Belton ISD matters — but confirm the school zone for your exact address, since West Temple is not uniformly one district. It's not the cheapest move in Temple, and it's not the closest to Fort Hood.
Q.02What is the median home price in West Temple, TX?+
About $304,900 list / $289,000 sold with a median $169/sf across roughly 314 active listings (Bell County MLS, May 2026). Individual subdivisions range from ~$113/sf in Sage Meadows and ~$134/sf in older Western Hills to ~$186/sf in newer Lakewood Ranch.
Q.03Is West Temple in Belton ISD or Temple ISD?+
It depends on the exact address — West Temple is not uniformly one district. Newer west-side communities commonly zone to Belton ISD; older inner-west pockets such as Western Hills and Ridgewood are often Temple ISD; Canyon Creek is Temple ISD; and Hills of Westwood and Bella Terra split by address. Some far-west parcels fall into Academy ISD. Always confirm the attendance zone for the specific parcel.
Q.04Which West Temple neighborhood is the best value?+
For most house per dollar, Sage Meadows (~$113/sf, 2,430 median sqft) and older Western Hills (~$134/sf) lead, and Western Hills also has the shortest BSW commute. The tradeoff on the older homes is an engineered foundation inspection (any pre-2000 slab on clay) and a school zone that's often Temple ISD.
Q.05How far is West Temple from Baylor Scott & White?+
Inner-west Western Hills is about 9 minutes to BSW Medical Center; the newer outer-west such as Lake Pointe and Lakewood Ranch is about 17 minutes (approximate, traffic-aware — verify your address).
Q.06How far is West Temple from Fort Hood?+
About 33 to 38 minutes to the main gate. That's a meaningful daily commute. If you work on post, Killeen or Harker Heights will usually fit better.
Q.07What are the newest neighborhoods in West Temple?+
The growth corridor: Hartrick (2018–2026), Parks at Westfield (to 2026), Lakewood Ranch, Hills of Westwood, and Tanglewood's newer sections. These run higher per square foot (~$172–$203) and the newer pockets commonly zone to Belton ISD — confirm by address.
Q.08Does West Temple have foundation problems?+
It's an age question, not a subdivision one. Any pre-2000 home on Central Texas clay can have slab movement — get an engineered structural inspection on those. In West Temple that risk is concentrated in Western Hills, Ridgewood, the older River Oaks Circle pocket, and the older sections of Wildflower and Tanglewood.
Q.09Why do homes cost more in West Temple than the rest of Temple?+
Newer construction and school-zone demand. Over the trailing 90 days, the West Temple median sold ($289,000) sits about 5.1% above Temple's citywide median ($275,000, same window) — Bell County MLS, May 2026.
Q.10West Temple vs South Temple — which should I choose?+
West Temple for newer homes and, in its newer pockets, a Belton-leaning school zone (confirmed by address), with more buyer competition and a price premium. South Temple for stronger established-area BSW access and more house per dollar.
Q.11Which West Temple homes have the most room to negotiate?+
The slow-moving pockets: Lakewood Ranch (165 DOM), Ridgewood (162), Hills of Westwood (147), and Hartrick (117). Long market time is buyer leverage. Fast pockets such as Western Hills (42), Sage Meadows (45), and Lake Pointe (49) leave little room.
Q.12Is West Temple a good place for first-time buyers relocating to Temple?+
Often yes. Lake Pointe and Parks at Westfield offer newer homes at the lower end of the zone's pricing with deep inventory. Confirm the school zone for your specific address and budget for the roughly 5% West Temple premium over citywide Temple.
Other dispatches from Temple & Bell County.
If this guide helped, here's where to read next — the rest of the catalog, organized.

The Temple, TX map tour
Same editorial treatment, four zones wide. If West Temple isn't the right fit, this is where you'll find the one that is.

Best neighborhoods near BSW
Built for hospital staff: commute-sorted, shift-aware, and zoned by attendance map — the relocation guide most BSW recruiters wish their hospital sent.
Go deeper · individual subdivisions
Compare nearby cities & zones
If you're moving for BSW
The West Temple Concierge.
If you've read this far, you already know more about West Temple than 95% of agents. The next step isn't a generic MLS search. When you engage me, six things go in motion the day we talk — most of which never appear on any listing site.
- 01The off-market pull
A pocket-listing and pre-MLS sweep across my agent network — Lakewood Ranch, Hartrick, Hills of Westwood. Roughly 1 in 5 of my West Temple closes never hit the public MLS.
- 02A parcel-level ISD audit
For every short-list address, I confirm the attendance zone directly with Belton ISD or Temple ISD — written record, not the listing field. The "verify-trap" doesn't happen on my files.
- 03A live Deal Tape
A Loom-style weekly walk-through of every new West Temple listing in your price band, with the comp, the days-on-market signal, and a buy/skip read — recorded the day it hits.
- 04Builder incentive intelligence
What D.R. Horton, KB, Centex, and Kiella are actually giving this month — closing costs, rate buydowns, design-center credits. Negotiated directly, not pulled from a builder website.
- 05An engineered-inspection roster
For any pre-2000 slab, you get the three local structural engineers I trust, with rates and lead times. Same for foundation, drainage, and termite — vetted on my own deals.
- 06The 30-day no-list hold
If we identify the right pocket and the right slab, I'll work it for 30 days before the seller's agent ever publicly lists — direct-mail, door-knock, and network ping. Real, not theoretical.



Temple TX Homes