Living in the North Dallas Suburbs: A Guide for Newcomers

What are the North Dallas Suburbs Like?


The Vibe
Upscale suburban energy with a heavy focus on family life, schools, and planned communities. It’s clean, modern, and often feels like a community designed in a boardroom (in a good way). If you’re looking for a white-picket-fence version of suburbia, you’ll find it here—just with better internet and newer schools.


Major Cities/Neighborhoods

  • Plano – Corporate center with great schools and established neighborhoods.
  • Frisco – Newer, fast-growing, family-centric with tons of amenities and retail.
  • McKinney – Historic charm mixed with suburban convenience.
  • Allen – Solid public schools, shopping, and suburban stability.
  • Prosper, Little Elm, Celina – Expanding towns with newer developments and room to grow.

Why It Works

  • Top-rated school districts and high graduation rates.
  • Convenient to many major employers—no need to commute downtown.
  • Tons of new housing inventory and community amenities.
  • Family-focused lifestyle with sports leagues, festivals, and good parks.

Watch Out For

  • Traffic bottlenecks on major roads like 75 and the Tollway.
  • Housing prices have crept up rapidly—value is shrinking.
  • Can feel culturally uniform or overly manicured.
  • Not built for pedestrians—walkability is limited outside of town centers.

Good Fit For

  • Families with school-age kids who want access to good public education.
  • Corporate professionals working in Collin County.
  • Remote workers wanting space, safety, and reliable broadband.
  • People who want new homes in master-planned neighborhoods.

Things to Do

  • Legacy West (Plano) – High-end shopping, rooftop dining, and nightlife.
  • The Star in Frisco – Mixed-use sports and entertainment district.
  • Downtown McKinney – A charming, walkable historic core with local shops and festivals.
  • Arbor Hills Nature Preserve – Great hiking and picnic space in Plano.
  • Stonebriar Centre + Grandscape – Regional mega-malls with entertainment options.

Housing Snapshot
Type: Predominantly single-family homes; some townhomes, condos, and apartments.

  • Buy: $450K–$750K in Plano/Frisco; lower in McKinney/Allen; $350K–$600K in Prosper/Celina.
  • Rent: $2,200–$3,500 for homes; $1,400–$2,200 for apartments and townhomes.

Commute & Transit
Expect 30–60 minute commutes into Dallas, depending on time and route. Dallas North Tollway, Highway 75, and 121 are your main lifelines. Public transit is limited—no DART rail, and few buses. Most residents drive everywhere or work locally/remotely.


Is This Area Right for You?
If you want a clean, suburban lifestyle with great schools and newer homes—and don’t mind driving everywhere—this is likely your sweet spot.

If you want to expand your search to the greater metro, check out the LookyLOO Review of the Dallas-Fort Worth Metro.