# The 7 Best Dallas Neighborhoods to Invest In (2026 Data-Backed Guide)
Dallas's real estate market has undergone a dramatic correction since the 2022 peak. Metro-wide median prices have fallen roughly 18% from their highs, inventory has climbed past 6 months of supply, and buyers now hold negotiating power that has not existed in over a decade. But within that broad correction, individual neighborhoods are telling very different stories. Some zip codes are still appreciating. Others are offering rental yields north of 7%. A few are being flooded with new construction that creates once-in-a-cycle buying opportunities.
This guide distills data from the Dallas Association of Realtors (DAR), the Texas Real Estate Research Center (TRERC), Zillow, Redfin, and Census Bureau migration figures into a ranked list of the seven best Dallas-area neighborhoods for real estate investment in 2026. Whether you are targeting cash flow, appreciation, or a blend of both, this analysis will help you allocate capital where the data supports it.
How We Ranked These Neighborhoods
Every neighborhood on this list was evaluated across five metrics:
•Year-over-year price trend — Is the neighborhood holding value or declining?
•Median days on market (DOM) — Lower DOM signals stronger demand relative to supply.
•Gross rental yield — Annual rent divided by purchase price. Higher is better for cash-flow investors.
•New construction pipeline — Heavy builder activity can suppress resale values short-term but signals long-term growth.
•Population and job growth proximity — Neighborhoods near major employers and transit corridors score higher.
No single metric tells the full story. A neighborhood with strong appreciation but weak rental yield may suit a different investor than one offering high cash flow in a flat-price environment. We weigh all five factors to produce a balanced ranking.
1. East Dallas (75214) — The Appreciation Play
Median price: $620,000
YoY change: +2.1%
Median DOM: 38 days
Gross rental yield: 4.8%
East Dallas remains the crown jewel of Dallas real estate appreciation. Despite DFW metro-wide correction, 75214 has posted positive year-over-year price growth for 14 consecutive quarters. The reason is straightforward: limited land, intense demand from young professionals and creative-class buyers, and proximity to downtown. Inventory in East Dallas consistently sits below 3 months of supply — solidly in seller's market territory even while the broader metro favors buyers.
Investment thesis: Buy for long-term appreciation. Rental yields are modest relative to purchase price, but annual price gains of 2-4% plus rent income produce strong total returns. Focus on properties east of Airport Boulevard where price-per-square-foot still has room to compress toward the Holly/Chestnut corridor.
Risk factor: Property taxes. Dallas County appraisals in 75214 have climbed aggressively, and investors should underwrite with a 10-15% annual tax increase assumption until the next reappraisal cycle stabilizes.
2. Oak Cliff / Bishop Arts Corridor (75233) — The Balanced Pick
Median price: $425,000
YoY change: -1.2%
Median DOM: 52 days
Gross rental yield: 6.1%
The 75233 zip code stretching from Stassney Lane south through the Manchaca corridor offers what few Dallas neighborhoods can: a sub-$450K entry point with above-average rental yield and proximity to both downtown and the booming South Congress cultural district. The slight year-over-year decline creates negotiating room, particularly on homes that have been listed 60+ days.
Investment thesis: This is Dallas's best risk-adjusted investment neighborhood. The combination of reasonable entry price, solid rent demand from UT graduate students and young families, and location between two appreciating corridors (SoCo to the north, Slaughter Lane retail to the south) creates a durable floor under values.
Risk factor: Flood plain. Portions of 75233 along Williamson Creek carry flood risk. Always verify FEMA zone status before purchasing.
3. Frisco / Crystal Falls (75034) — The Cash Flow King
Median price: $365,000
YoY change: -4.8%
Median DOM: 78 days
Gross rental yield: 7.3%
Frisco has been one of the hardest-hit Dallas suburbs during the correction, with aggressive new construction from builders like Lennar, DR Horton, and Meritage flooding the market. That pain for existing homeowners is opportunity for investors. Builder concessions — including rate buydowns to the low 5s, closing cost credits up to $15,000, and finished upgrades — have pushed effective purchase prices well below list.
Investment thesis: Pure cash flow. At a $365K purchase price and average monthly rents of $2,225 for a 3BR/2BA, gross yields exceed 7%. Net yields after taxes, insurance, and management still land above 4.5%. The DART Red Line extension (completion expected 2028) will add a transit premium that does not yet exist in pricing.
Risk factor: Builder inventory overhang. Until starts slow meaningfully — which TRERC data suggests is already happening — resale values may continue to drift downward. Buy with the intent to hold 5+ years.
4. North Dallas / Rundberg Revival (75243) — The Undervalued Opportunity
Median price: $335,000
YoY change: -0.8%
Median DOM: 44 days
Gross rental yield: 6.9%
The Rundberg area has long been overlooked by investors focused on trendier corridors, but the data tells a compelling story. At a $335K median — nearly $80K below the DFW metro average — 75243 offers the lowest entry point of any neighborhood within 10 miles of downtown Dallas. Rental demand is robust, driven by proximity to Uptown Dallas, Richland College campus, and multiple major employers along the I-35E / US-75 corridor.
Investment thesis: Value investing. The Rundberg corridor is undergoing a slow but measurable transformation. City of Dallas investment in the Rundberg Revitalization initiative, new mixed-use development at the former Highland Mall site, and improving walkability scores suggest this area is on a 5-10 year trajectory similar to East Dallas's transformation a decade ago.
Risk factor: Neighborhood reputation still suppresses owner-occupant demand, which limits appreciation upside in the near term. This is a rent-and-hold play, not a flip play.
5. Allen / Brushy Creek (75034) — The Family-Market Anchor
Median price: $475,000
YoY change: -2.4%
Median DOM: 55 days
Gross rental yield: 5.5%
Allen consistently ranks among the best school districts in the DFW metro, and that drives a deep, reliable pool of family renters and buyers. The 75034 zip code has corrected less than the broader Collin County average, precisely because school-driven demand creates a floor that pure investor markets lack.
Investment thesis: Stability. Allen will not produce the highest yields or the fastest appreciation, but it offers the most predictable income stream and the lowest vacancy risk of any suburb on this list. Ideal for investors who prioritize capital preservation alongside moderate returns.
Risk factor: HOA restrictions. Many Allen subdivisions have covenants that limit or prohibit short-term rentals. Verify HOA rules before purchasing if your strategy involves Airbnb or VRBO.
6. Seagoville / Southeast Dallas County (75159) — The Emerging Frontier
Median price: $310,000
YoY change: +0.5%
Median DOM: 61 days
Gross rental yield: 6.5%
Seagoville is Dallas's most under-the-radar investment opportunity. Sitting just southeast of Dallas-Bergstrom International Airport, this area benefits from Toyota North American HQ employment (less than 10 minutes away), Samsung's expanding fab campus, and the continued buildout of the I-30 corridor. Despite being the lowest-priced neighborhood on this list, Seagoville has posted slightly positive YoY appreciation — a remarkable feat in a declining metro market.
Investment thesis: Growth-stage investing. Seagoville today looks like Mesquite or Duncanville did five years ago: affordable, under-improved, and sitting in the path of massive infrastructure and employment expansion. The Tesla and Samsung workforce alone guarantees rental demand for the foreseeable future. Buy now at $310K and hold through the infrastructure buildout.
Risk factor: Limited retail and amenities. Seagoville still lacks the restaurants, shopping, and community infrastructure that attract owner-occupants. This will improve, but on a 5-7 year timeline.
7. Mesquite / Plum Creek (75149) — The New Construction Discount
Median price: $340,000
YoY change: -5.2%
Median DOM: 82 days
Gross rental yield: 6.8%
Like Frisco, Mesquite has been hit hard by the new construction wave. But Mesquite offers something Frisco does not: direct I-35E access to both downtown Dallas (25 minutes) and San Marcos (15 minutes), plus a rapidly maturing retail and dining scene along US-67. The Plum Creek master-planned community has become a magnet for families priced out of South Dallas / Oak Cliff, creating a rental market that has not softened despite the homeownership market correction.
Investment thesis: Buy the dip. Mesquite's correction is driven almost entirely by builder oversupply, not by weakening demand fundamentals. As builder starts decline — TRERC reports a 22% drop in new permits QoQ — the supply-demand balance will normalize. Investors who buy now capture both the price discount and the builder concessions (rate buydowns, closing credits) that will disappear when the market tightens.
Risk factor: Commute dependency. Mesquite's value proposition is fundamentally tied to commute tolerance. If remote work policies shift back toward full-time office, the I-35E commute could suppress demand. Underwrite conservatively.
How to Build a Portfolio Across These Neighborhoods
The smartest approach is diversification across investment styles:
•Appreciation anchor: 1-2 properties in East Dallas (75214) or South Dallas / Oak Cliff (75233) that grow in value over time.
•Cash flow engine: 2-3 properties in Frisco (75034), Mesquite (75149), or North Dallas (75243) that generate monthly income exceeding expenses.
•Speculative upside: 1 property in Seagoville (75159) positioned for the Tesla/Samsung employment corridor boom.
This blend produces a portfolio that generates income today, appreciates over the medium term, and has asymmetric upside from Dallas's continued economic expansion.
Key Takeaways for 2026
•The correction is your friend. The 18% decline from 2022 peaks has created the best entry point since 2019 for disciplined investors.
•Not all neighborhoods are equal. Metro-wide statistics mask enormous variation. East Dallas is still appreciating while Mesquite is down 5.2%.
•Builder concessions are temporary. The rate buydowns and closing credits available in Frisco and Mesquite today will vanish as inventory normalizes over the next 12-18 months.
•Rental demand is strengthening. Affordability constraints are keeping more households in the rental market, which benefits buy-and-hold investors across all price points.
•Due diligence matters more than ever. Flood zones, HOA restrictions, tax appraisal trajectories, and school district boundaries all create micro-level variations that can make or break an investment.
Dallas Signals tracks every neighborhood, every listing, and every trend in the Dallas real estate market. Explore live deal analytics and neighborhood data at dallassignals.com.