Fulshear’s Big Leap And What It Means For Its Residents

August 1, 2025 Reading Time: 5 minutes
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Maria Gatea
Written by
Maria Gatea

There was a time not long ago when Fulshear was a quiet crossroads west of Katy, best known for wide open spaces and a small-town feel. Today, it’s the fastest-growing city in Texas and the country, a place where new neighborhoods, schools, and businesses seem to appear almost overnight.

In just one decade, the city’s population has grown from just 2,300 residents in 2014 to nearly 27,000 by 2023,  a head-spinning 1,082% increase. What was once a sleepy rural outpost is now a thriving hub of the Houston metro area, one of the nation’s fastest-growing regions. And, for Fulshear, the question isn’t whether growth will continue. That’s pretty much a given. It’s how the city can grow without losing the quality of life that first drew so many here.

The numbers only tell part of the story

City Manager Zachary Goodlander witnessed this transformation firsthand. “As someone who moved here over six years ago and now serves as City Manager, I’ve had a front-row seat to the changes taking place,” he says. “The numbers tell you how fast we’re growing, but they only tell part of the story.”

That story, he explains, is one of opportunity mixed with complexity. Fulshear’s growth has brought with it a sense of energy and optimism, but also real challenges that local authorities and residents are trying to manage.

Part of the challenge is structural and relates to the tools that the city has in order to regulate development or adjust tax rates to meet new demands. “We’ve inherited development agreements — some approved over a decade ago — that are now raising concerns among residents,” he explains. “These decisions may be old, but we still have to manage their outcomes today.”

Goodlander’s priority has been helping residents understand how growth impacts their city and lives. The city’s Fulshear FACTS program was launched for that reason, offering residents a window into planning, infrastructure, and finances. “In this era of information, I believe transparency isn’t just a virtue. It’s a necessity,” he says. “Our staff cares deeply about this community, and we strive every day to earn and maintain the public’s trust by providing clear, honest communication.”

He points to collaboration as another key to making growth work. “I’ve enjoyed working closely with our partners at the County, Emergency Services District, school districts, toll road authority, and others. Our goals don’t always overlap perfectly, but when they do, we can make real progress together.”

From rural quiet to bustling opportunity

For the local business community, the transformation has been just as dramatic. Rachel Durham, Vice President of the Fulshear Regional Chamber of Commerce, says the city has fundamentally changed in just a few years.

“Over the past few years, Fulshear has transitioned from a quiet rural community into one of the fastest-growing cities in Texas,” Durham says. “You can see it everywhere — in master-planned communities like Cross Creek Ranch and Jordan Ranch, the arrival of new schools under Lamar CISD and Katy ISD, and the wave of new restaurants, shops, and service businesses along FM 1093. Even infrastructure is catching up, with the extension of the Westpark Tollway and continued investment in mobility and utilities by the City of Fulshear.”

For businesses, Durham says, the change is overwhelmingly positive. “Growth has attracted new businesses, increased employment options, and strengthened the local economy. At the same time, it brings challenges — traffic congestion, maintaining infrastructure, and preserving Fulshear’s unique small-town charm.”

She points to the Fulshear 2035 Comprehensive Plan as a crucial tool to balance these competing priorities. And she’s particularly excited about Fulshear Central, a planned mixed-use project that will bring retail, offices, entertainment, and dining into one destination. “It reflects the future of Fulshear: smart, purposeful growth that serves both residents and businesses,” Durham says. “And it shows how invested our community is in shaping that future. Our Chamber membership is at record levels because local businesses want a voice in where we’re headed.”

A community that cares

Despite the rapid change, local leaders agree that Fulshear hasn’t lost its sense of community. Events like Liberty on the Brazos, city meetings, and Chamber gatherings remain well-attended, with new residents and old-timers alike showing up to talk about the city’s future.

“Fortunately, Fulshear is blessed with an engaged, passionate community,” Goodlander says. “People care about the city’s future, and that gives me great hope. I wouldn’t want it any other way.”

Planning isn’t just about the next year or two. It’s about decades ahead: ensuring that roads, utilities, schools, and emergency services can handle the growing population while protecting what people love about living here.

“There’s no denying that we feel the pressure of growth,” Goodlander admits. “But we also see the opportunity: to shape a community that remembers its roots, embraces its future, and helps its residents feel connected to something larger than their neighborhoods.”

Growth, costs, and what else makes Fulshear so attractive

Fulshear’s rapid growth has already reshaped not only demographics, but also the local economy. Since 2014, the typical home value in Fulshear has risen by over 64%, now sitting around $524,000. That’s a significant increase, but still more moderate than the national average, where home prices have climbed nearly 90% during the same period. In other words, Fulshear remains relatively affordable, especially considering its top-tier schools, master-planned neighborhoods, and small-town atmosphere just outside Houston’s urban core. That’s part of what makes the city so attractive to newcomers.

And many of those newcomers are families. Fulshear households average 3.28 people, larger than the national average of 2.6, according to the U.S. Census. Nearly nine in ten homes are owner-occupied, and most are single-family houses, meaning residents often arrive with not just furniture, but tools for home maintenance, gardening equipment, seasonal gear, and everything that comes with suburban life.

To help manage the transition, many turn to self storage. Renting a storage unit in Fulshear averages about $146 per month, offering a flexible solution for those in between homes, renovating, or simply trying to keep their growing households more organized.

What comes next for Fulshear’s residents

For residents, though, the real question isn’t only about population totals and housing costs. It’s about whether Fulshear can remain a place where neighbors feel connected, where events like Liberty on the Brazos still bring the community together, and where growth feels like an opportunity, not just a strain.

“Many people moved to Fulshear expecting it to stay just the way it was,” Goodlander says. “Of course, a lot of other people had the same idea and now we’re all living with the result: a fast-growing city at the leading edge of one of the fastest-growing metros in the country. That growth was always going to come. The question now is how we guide it.”

Goodlander says the city’s focus isn’t just on the next year or two, but on planning for decades ahead, maintaining roads and utilities, diversifying the tax base, investing in law enforcement and emergency services, and protecting the quality of life for everyone who calls Fulshear home.

“There’s no denying we feel the pressure of growth,” he says. “But we also see the opportunity: to shape a community that remembers its roots, embraces its future, and helps its residents feel connected to something larger than their neighborhoods.”

Maria Gatea
Written by
Maria Gatea

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