Far North Dallas is one of the most established and desirable residential areas in the DFW metroplex, located along the northern edge of the City of Dallas. Known for its highly sought-after neighborhoods, strong school-zoning demand, executive housing, and central accessibility, Far North Dallas offers a combination of long-term value stability, commuter convenience, and neighborhood-driven housing demand. The area has experienced steady long-term demand through residential turnover, executive relocation activity, property modernization, and neighborhood reinvestment rather than large-scale suburban expansion. Unlike rapidly growing outer-ring suburbs, Far North Dallas combines established move-up neighborhoods, executive communities, luxury housing pockets, and highly desirable school-zoned areas within one market. This creates a housing environment influenced heavily by neighborhood-level dynamics rather than a single city-wide trend. Buyers are often drawn to Far North Dallas for its central location, access to major employment corridors, strong public and private school options, and broad range of housing opportunities across move-up, executive, and luxury price tiers. Relocation buyers, professionals, executive homeowners, move-up families, and long-term residents frequently target Far North Dallas for its balance of accessibility, stability, and established community appeal. Housing in Far North Dallas includes a mix of established resale homes, executive properties, luxury residences, golf-course communities, and mature neighborhoods with significant renovation activity. Pricing and market behavior vary significantly by neighborhood, school zoning, property condition, lot size, architectural style, and inventory concentration. Far North Dallas is best suited for buyers who prioritize established neighborhoods, strong schools, commuter convenience, and long-term residential stability. It offers a balanced lifestyle with access to parks, trails, shopping, dining, major transportation corridors, and neighborhoods such as Prestonwood, Bent Tree, Highlands North, and Glen Abbey. As Far North Dallas continues to evolve, its market remains driven by school-zoning demand, executive relocation activity, neighborhood desirability, and inventory availability rather than large-scale development expansion. Understanding both the lifestyle and the neighborhood-level housing dynamics is key when making a move here. For live pricing trends and inventory data, view the Far North Dallas Real Estate Market Report.
Prosper is one of North Texas’ fastest-growing communities, and it behaves differently than most suburbs because so much of the housing supply is newer, master-planned, and still expanding. That means lifestyle decisions and real estate decisions are tied together here, neighborhood choice, school zoning, amenities, commute patterns, and builder activity all matter.
This guide is designed to help you understand Prosper at the neighborhood level, not just the city level. You’ll see live demographic data, schools, and local points of interest below, and we’ll use a plain-English lens to explain what that data means in real life, and who Prosper is a strong fit for.
If you want the live housing numbers, inventory, pricing, and leverage indicators, use our Prosper Real Estate Market Report.
Far North Dallas is one of the most established and sought-after residential areas in the DFW metroplex, located along the northern edge of the City of Dallas. Known for its mature neighborhoods, strong school-zoning demand, executive housing, and central accessibility, Far North Dallas offers a combination of long-term value stability, housing diversity, and neighborhood-driven demand across multiple price tiers.
The area has experienced steady long-term demand through residential turnover, executive relocation activity, property modernization, and neighborhood reinvestment rather than large-scale suburban expansion. Unlike rapidly developing outer-ring suburbs, Far North Dallas combines established move-up communities, executive neighborhoods, luxury housing pockets, golf-course communities, and highly desirable school-zoned areas within one market. This creates a housing environment influenced heavily by neighborhood-level dynamics rather than a single city-wide trend.
Buyers are often drawn to Far North Dallas for its convenient access to major employment corridors, highly regarded public and private school options, established community infrastructure, and broad range of housing opportunities across move-up, executive, and luxury price tiers. Relocation buyers, professionals, executive homeowners, move-up families, and long-term residents frequently target Far North Dallas for its balance of accessibility, neighborhood stability, and long-term value potential.
Housing in Far North Dallas includes a mix of established resale homes, executive properties, luxury residences, golf-course communities, renovated housing stock, and mature neighborhoods with significant modernization activity. Pricing and market behavior vary significantly by neighborhood, school zoning, property condition, lot size, architectural style, and inventory concentration.
Far North Dallas is best suited for buyers who prioritize established neighborhoods, strong schools, commuter convenience, and long-term residential stability. It offers a balanced lifestyle with access to parks, trails, shopping, dining, major transportation corridors, and neighborhoods such as Prestonwood, Bent Tree, Highlands North, Glen Abbey, and surrounding executive communities.
As Far North Dallas continues to evolve, its market remains driven by school-zoning demand, executive relocation activity, neighborhood desirability, and inventory availability rather than large-scale development expansion. Understanding both the lifestyle and the neighborhood-level housing dynamics is key when making a move here.
For live pricing trends and inventory data, view the Far North Dallas Real Estate Market Report.
Prosper is largely composed of master-planned communities and newer subdivisions. Absorption speed, pricing stability, and resale competition often vary by neighborhood rather than by ZIP code.
Windsong Ranch is one of Prosper’s most recognized master-planned communities. It includes resort-style amenities, extensive green space, and newer construction inventory. Because of its amenity concentration and branding, resale homes here often compete directly with builder spec inventory within the same price tier.
Star Trail includes a mix of luxury and upper-mid inventory. Larger floorplans and higher price tiers can result in longer absorption cycles compared to mid-tier neighborhoods. Price movement here is often influenced by high-end inventory stacking.
Whitley Place includes a combination of established homes and newer builds. Lot sizes and architectural consistency can influence resale positioning differently than fully new master-planned phases.
Lakes of La Cima represents an earlier development phase of Prosper. Homes here may compete differently against brand-new construction due to build era and amenity comparisons.
Prosper continues to expand through phased development. As new sections open in master-planned communities, inventory conditions can shift quickly within specific neighborhoods.
Subdivision-level analysis is critical when evaluating pricing and negotiation leverage in Prosper.
If you're preparing to buy or sell in Windsong Ranch, Star Trail, Gentle Creek, or surrounding communities, learn how our subdivision-level strategy works in our Best Realtor in Prosper guide.
169,212 people live in Far North Dallas TX Community & Neighborhood Guide, where the median age is 38 and the average individual income is $55,899. Data provided by the U.S. Census Bureau.
Total Population
Median Age
Population Density Population Density This is the number of people per square mile in a neighborhood.
Average individual Income
There's plenty to do around Far North Dallas TX Community & Neighborhood Guide, including shopping, dining, nightlife, parks, and more. Data provided by Walk Score and Yelp.
Explore popular things to do in the area, including Parks Donuts, Gourmet European Market, and Sushi On.
| Name | Category | Distance | Reviews |
Ratings by
Yelp
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|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dining | 4.2 miles | 16 reviews | 5/5 stars | |
| Dining | 1.16 miles | 7 reviews | 5/5 stars | |
| Dining | 2.26 miles | 11 reviews | 5/5 stars | |
| Dining · $$ | 0.57 miles | 15 reviews | 5/5 stars | |
| Dining | 3.72 miles | 28 reviews | 5/5 stars | |
| Dining · $$ | 2.23 miles | 45 reviews | 5/5 stars | |
| Shopping | 4.2 miles | 45 reviews | 5/5 stars | |
| Active | 1.59 miles | 11 reviews | 5/5 stars | |
| Active | 1.91 miles | 20 reviews | 5/5 stars | |
| Active | 0.72 miles | 5 reviews | 5/5 stars | |
| Beauty | 2.86 miles | 7 reviews | 5/5 stars | |
| Beauty | 1.96 miles | 6 reviews | 5/5 stars | |
| Beauty | 1.86 miles | 7 reviews | 5/5 stars | |
| Beauty | 1.59 miles | 10 reviews | 5/5 stars | |
| Beauty | 1.82 miles | 18 reviews | 5/5 stars | |
| Beauty | 1.51 miles | 7 reviews | 5/5 stars | |
| Beauty | 1.97 miles | 11 reviews | 5/5 stars | |
| Beauty | 3.79 miles | 6 reviews | 5/5 stars | |
| Beauty | 1.96 miles | 6 reviews | 5/5 stars | |
| Beauty | 1.64 miles | 6 reviews | 5/5 stars | |
| Beauty | 3.39 miles | 26 reviews | 5/5 stars | |
| Beauty | 0.84 miles | 8 reviews | 5/5 stars | |
| Beauty | 3.62 miles | 15 reviews | 5/5 stars | |
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Far North Dallas TX Community & Neighborhood Guide has 80,763 households, with an average household size of 2. Data provided by the U.S. Census Bureau. Here’s what the people living in Far North Dallas TX Community & Neighborhood Guide do for work — and how long it takes them to get there. Data provided by the U.S. Census Bureau. 169,212 people call Far North Dallas TX Community & Neighborhood Guide home. The population density is 13,124.076 and the largest age group is Data provided by the U.S. Census Bureau.
Total Population
Population Density Population Density This is the number of people per square mile in a neighborhood.
Median Age
Men vs Women
Population by Age Group
0-9 Years
10-17 Years
18-24 Years
25-64 Years
65-74 Years
75+ Years
Education Level
Total Households
Average Household Size
Average individual Income
Households with Children
With Children:
Without Children:
Marital Status
Blue vs White Collar Workers
Blue Collar:
White Collar:
We don’t evaluate Prosper using city-wide averages alone. Prosper is a neighborhood-driven market where school zoning, subdivision design, and new construction cycles can change buyer demand and resale competition quickly.
When we advise clients on Prosper, we compare neighborhoods by build era, amenity profile, commute patterns, lot size expectations, and how resale inventory competes with nearby new construction. That’s how you avoid picking the wrong neighborhood for your lifestyle, or overpaying for a location premium that doesn’t hold in the next resale cycle.
• Predominantly newer construction and master-planned communities
• Neighborhood choice matters here more than city-wide averages
• Demand is influenced by school zoning, amenities, and commute corridors
• Expect active development, retail expansion, and ongoing infrastructure grow
Find out why our clients and our team of expert agents are the happiest in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex. We are thrilled to have the opportunity to work with you!