Who’s best?
Who’ll pay more rent?
What’s affordable?
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WINTER 2026
| non-traditional average1 | traditional 2BR ÷ 22 | average 1BR rented solo3 |
| 700 | 1062 | 1484 |
roomiematch.com’s DFW roommate rundown:
If you’ve never visited Dallas or even the great state of Texas . . . Dallas (DFW, the greater Dallas/Fort Worth metropolitan area) is probably larger than you think.
Like quite a bit larger.
Greater DFW is larger than Connecticut and Rhode Island combined, and larger than New Jersey.
Dallas/Fort Worth is one of the largest metro areas in both Texas and the US, with about 1.3 million in the city and 7.5 million in the greater metro.
Since 1/4 of all Texans now live inside the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex, it has a very diverse population. Almost all ethnic and religious backgrounds are represented to some extent in Dallas.
Meanwhile, about 20% of the overall area of Dallas is parkland – the Trinity River Project Land Use Plan, about 10,000 acres? And it’s lovely.
But weirdly, there’s not a lot of trees elsewhere? But as the Trinity River canopy spreads, that may continue to change.
The expansively successful local economy along with the vast expanse of land that Dallas has consumed has been referred to as “Silicon Prairie.” Which makes sense, because you’re really going to need a reliable air-conditioned car to be anything like comfy driving across it.
As Texas has been described as a “car culture” and Dallas has so much urban sprawl, most Dallasites drive everywhere. It has been suggested that not only are many native Dallasites unable to assist you with navigating their public transport system (DART), they may not even know it exists at all.
You must drive a decent car to deal with Dallas.
And keep that car maintenance in check.
There’s much celebration of DFW affluence . . . more retail stores per capita, more luxury hotels, fine dining, exclusive posh retail shopping, larger homes in larger lifestyle communities, golf courses, high end air travel (from one of the world’s busiest airports) and fancy cars . . . which have in and of themselves literally driven Dallasites toward their own urban sprawl.
BUT in the meantime, the rent is still relatively affordable . . . in large part due to aforementioned urban sprawl. All of those exciting options are really spread out!
That also means a whole lotta land that’s all Dallas with roommate rental options all over it. Many roommate options. In so many neighborhoods with different vibes.
Just not the option to access most of them easily without your own reliable car.
The rest of the DFW roommate lowdown:
After you’re settled down, you and your roommates should experience Dallas and Fort Worth’s:
(The original mysteriously disappeared back in 1941 and was never recovered. But a replacement Woofus was supplied by David Newton and the Friends of Fair Park in 1998, who continues to preside today, while spouting water from his nozzle.) |
Here’s the city of Dallas’s official Resident page with lists of community resources
Notes
1. The non-traditional roommate rent average for this city we’ve experienced over the last 3 years. We can’t predict future rental availability, because we’re neither in control of any rental market nor psychic, sorry!
But in most cities most of the time, the recent and relatively recent past are the best predictors.
2. This idea came from smartasset.com‘s ranking of what a roommate saves you in 50 cities. They ranked where roommates will save you the most money, based on the average cost of a 1BR as opposed to a 2BR ÷ 2. Unsurprisingly, the more expensive the city, the more you can save, but the savings are significant in all larger metros. So we got the data for the rest of our cities from Zumper too.
This is really the minimum you could save, as you could live with more than one roommate, split more services, share food or other supplies, etc. More sharing tends to lead to more savings too, as per our roommate roadmap.
As per the rest of the description at the top of this page, we’re calling this “traditional” roommate rent.
3. From zumper.com.
4. Directly quoted from the Trust for Public Land’s parkland rating system.
“The ParkScore index awards each city up to 100 points for acreage based on the average of two equally weighted measures: median park size and parkland as a percentage of city area. Factoring park acreage into each city’s ParkScore rating helps account for the importance of larger “destination parks” that serve many users who live farther than ten minutes’ walking distance.”
While each city’s rundown already includes their individual ParkScore, nature lovers might like to see all roommate cities ranked for parkland.
5. Directly quoted from Walk Score’s Cities and Neighborhoods Ranking. They’ve ranked “more than 2,800 cities and over 10,000 neighborhoods so you can find a walkable home or apartment.”
While each city’s rundown already includes their individual Walk Score, dedicated pedestrians might like to see all roommate cities ranked for walkability.
6. From various lists here on our own best roommate cities.
7. From hoodmaps.com: a collaborative map where residents use tags describing social situations you’re likely to find. Other users can thumb up or down, so the largest tags have been thumbed up the most.