Cliffs of Canyon Creek
Temple's topographical premium. Custom estates on bluff-side lots, 2.0 miles from Baylor Scott & White. $250K–$999K. No two homes alike.
What Is Cliffs of Canyon Creek, Temple TX?
What is Cliffs of Canyon Creek in Temple TX?
The Cliffs of Canyon Creek is a premium subdivision in Temple, TX featuring custom homes built between 1980 and 2007 on 0.25 to 2.8-acre lots, located 2.0 miles from Baylor Scott & White Medical Center. Prices range from $250,000 to $999,000 with a median of approximately $413,000. Unlike the broader Canyon Creek community, the Cliffs occupy elevated bluff terrain with mature hardwood canopy, creek backdrops, and individualized architecture—no two homes are alike.
- Price Range: $250K–$999K | Median $413K | $93–$185/sqft Source: MLS Data, March 2026
- Schools: Temple ISD — Thornton Elementary, Bonham Middle, Temple High Verify per address
- Taxes: ~2.30% composite rate, NO MUD/PID — $400K home = ~$8,000–$9,200/yr Source: Bell CAD 2024
- Builder Legacy: Bobby Arnold Homes (Phase I semi-custom), true custom estates (Phase V) 1980–2007
- Terrain: Pepper Creek watershed, wooded bluffs, wildlife habitat certified lots Not flat subdivision terrain
- Appreciation: 75–105% over 10 years — baseline $145K (2016) to $413K median (2026) Source: Bell CAD historicals
Taylor's Take on Cliffs of Canyon Creek

Here's the deal: you trade new-build warranties for 2.8-acre wooded privacy and a 5-minute hospital commute. That's the entire value proposition of the Cliffs.
These are not production homes. Bobby Arnold built Phase I in the 1980s with four-side masonry and hand-scraped hardwoods. Phase V went full custom—Tudor estates, Hill Country stone, 20-foot ceilings on multi-acre parcels. The architectural variety is the best in Temple. Period.
But you need to go in with your eyes open. The Houston Black Clay under these bluffs has been cycling for 40+ years. Pre-1990 slabs without post-tension cables will need attention. Budget $8,000–$15,000 for foundation work on the older stock, and run a hydrostatic plumbing test on any home built before 1995. Insurance does not cover this.
If you can absorb that CapEx reality, you get irreplaceable topography, mature timber, and the kind of lot privacy that simply does not exist in any new-build subdivision in Bell County. The $700M Meta data center 6.8 miles south is going to keep pushing values up without touching your quality of life.

Full Neighborhood Tour
The Cliffs at Canyon Creek — Temple’s Best Kept Secret
Phase I vs. Phase V: Where the $749K Spread Comes From
The Cliffs are not one market. They are three distinct price tiers built across two decades. Understanding which phase you are buying in determines your CapEx exposure, your lot size, and your renovation timeline.
Entry Tier — Phase I Ranch
$250K–$330K- Builder
- Bobby Arnold Homes (semi-custom)
- Style
- Single-story ranch, 4-side masonry
- $/Sqft
- $125–$168
- Typical Buyer
- First move-up, nurses, early-career physicians

Mid-Market — Updated Phase V
$350K–$550K- Builder
- Custom builders, individual architects
- Style
- Two-story traditional, Hill Country stone
- $/Sqft
- $140–$177
- Typical Buyer
- BSW physicians, executives, move-up families


Estate Tier — Custom Acreage
$700K–$999K- Builder
- True custom — individual commissions
- Style
- Tudor, Hill Country estate, Old World artisan
- $/Sqft
- $96–$172
- Typical Buyer
- Department heads, 1031 exchange, multi-generational

Foundation Physics on a Slope
Every neighborhood page talks about "charm." This one talks about Houston Black Clay. If you are spending $400K+ on a 1980s slab sitting on an expansive soil bluff, you need to understand exactly what is happening underneath you.
15,000 psi of expansion pressure on your slab. 30% swell rate when saturated. 4+ inch cracks during summer drought. This cyclical heaving has been torquing pre-1990 concrete slabs in this neighborhood for four decades.
Repair costs: Minor crack injection runs $300–$1,300. Standard perimeter stabilization with pressed concrete piers averages $1,000–$3,000 per pier. A typical 1980s ranch needing partial perimeter work: $5,500–$15,000.
Insurance does NOT cover this. Standard Texas HO-A/HO-3 policies universally exclude earth movement, soil expansion, and foundation settlement. This is an out-of-pocket CapEx item.
The Bluff & Clay Risk Matrix
No post-tension cables
Standard clay cycling. Budget $8K–$12K for pier work. Soaker hoses mandatory.
Clay + slope gradient + root pressure. Budget $12K–$15K+. Retaining wall inspection required. French drains essential.
Post-tension slab likely
Post-tension cables mitigate most lateral movement. Maintain drainage and guttering.
Cables help, but slope adds hydrostatic pressure and erosion. Annual inspection recommended.
Mitigation Checklist
- 1. Soaker hoses — Run 18 inches from the foundation perimeter during drought months (June–September). Consistent moisture prevents the 4-inch clay crack cycle.
- 2. French drains — Redirect creek-side and slope runoff away from the foundation. Critical for any lot backing to Pepper Creek.
- 3. 6-inch seamless gutters — Standard 5-inch gutters overflow in Central Texas downpours. The extra inch matters on a bluff lot.
- 4. Hydrostatic plumbing test — Non-negotiable for any 1980s slab. Sub-slab plumbing leaks cause more foundation heaving than clay alone. Budget $300–$500 for the test.
- 5. Engineering report — If the home has had prior foundation work, demand the transferable warranty documentation and verify pier type (steel vs. pressed concrete).

BSW Commute: Cliffs vs. Wildflower Country Club
If you are an attending physician, surgeon, or senior administrator at BSW, you are likely cross-shopping exactly two neighborhoods. Here is the data side by side.
| Factor | Cliffs of Canyon Creek | Wildflower Country Club |
|---|---|---|
| Median $/Sqft | $150/sqft | $165/sqft |
| BSW Commute | 2.0 mi / 5–8 min | 3.5 mi / 5–8 min |
| Lot Size | 0.25–2.8 acres | 0.15–0.5 acres |
| Terrain | Bluffs, mature timber, creek backdrops | Flat, manicured golf course |
| Amenities | None (natural CPTED security) | 18-hole golf, pool, tennis, clubhouse |
| Forced Fees | $0–$42/mo HOA (fragmented) | HOA + club membership fees |
| Year Built | 1980–2007 | 1990s–2010s |
| Foundation Risk | Higher (older stock + slopes) | Moderate (flat + newer) |
| Privacy | High (cul-de-sacs, wooded buffers) | Moderate (golf course views = visibility) |


Split Zoning, HOA Variables & Flood Risk
Core streets in the Cliffs—Canyon Creek Drive, Stratford Drive, Kensington Court—are zoned to Temple ISD. The specific feeders: Thornton Elementary → Bonham Middle → Temple High.
The neighborhood has not been absorbed into recent Belton ISD boundary redraws. If you require guaranteed Belton ISD zoning, the Cliffs will not satisfy that parameter. However, Temple ISD offers a STEM Academy, robust CTE pathways, and advanced baccalaureate programs at Temple High that align with the medical-professional demographic. Always verify per specific address during the option period using the TISD Infofinder portal.
Canyon Creek HOA (Est. 1989)
- Governing Body
- Canyon Creek Homeowners' Association (non-profit, 1989)
- Management
- Spectrum AM / Trio HOA Management
- ARC Committee
- Active — governs metal roofs, xeriscaping, fencing, generators
- Dues
- $0–$42/mo depending on phase (highly fragmented)
- STR Restrictions
- No explicit neighborhood-wide ban identified — verify per lot


Overall neighborhood flood risk is statistically low—only 3.5% of properties face quantifiable flooding risk over a 30-year horizon (First Street Foundation data). The vast majority of interior lots sit safely at higher elevations.
However, creek-backing lots are the exception. While the primary residences are built on elevated bluffs above the floodplain, the rear acreage of these premium parcels frequently descends into FEMA Special Flood Hazard Areas (Zone A). This may trigger mandatory flood insurance requirements for mortgage compliance. Request an elevation certificate and review the current FEMA FIRM panel for any property backing to water.
Property Tax Breakdown
| Taxing Entity | 2024 Rate |
|---|---|
| Temple ISD | 1.1489% |
| City of Temple | 0.6265% |
| Bell County | 0.3237% |
| Temple College | 0.2017% |
| Composite Total | ~2.30% |

Who This Page Is Not For
Trust is built by telling you when to leave. If any of these describe you, the Cliffs are the wrong fit—and I have a better recommendation.


Frequently Asked Questions: Cliffs of Canyon Creek
What is Cliffs of Canyon Creek in Temple TX?
How much do homes cost in Cliffs of Canyon Creek?
What school district is Cliffs of Canyon Creek in?
Is Cliffs of Canyon Creek the same as Canyon Creek?
How far is Cliffs of Canyon Creek from Baylor Scott and White?
Does Cliffs of Canyon Creek have an HOA?
Are there foundation issues in Cliffs of Canyon Creek?
How does Cliffs of Canyon Creek compare to Wildflower Country Club?
What is the property tax rate in Cliffs of Canyon Creek?
Is Cliffs of Canyon Creek a good investment?

Don't Buy a House on a Slope Without Pulling the Permit History
I have walked these streets for years. I know which lots drain well, which foundations have been piered, and which phases are actually worth the premium. Let me save you from the surprises.



