Trophy Club, TX
B+
Overall13.5kPopulation

Quality of Life

Overall Quality Of Life
A-
Great

A high quality of life with strong walkability, manageable living costs, healthy neighborhood signals, and solid amenity access.

What does this tell us?

Quality of Life blends cost of living, nearby amenities, socioeconomic signals, and neighborhood character. City-level scores represent the whole municipality; individual neighborhoods can differ.

Cost of Living

181/100

81% above national average

C

The Real Cost of Living in Trophy Club, TX

TierIndividualFamily (4)
Survival $29k$55k
Comfortable $120k$176k
Luxury $304k+$471k+
Elite (Top 5%) $357k+$554k+
Affordability Ratio

110%

The Area Signal

A metric tracking the socioeconomic signals of the area.

A+
Hood Index scan area
Luxury Lean92%
RisksNeutralGrowth
Premium
33
Positive
7
Poor
1
Negative
4

Groceries

8 within 10 miles

0.9mi

Gas

20 within 10 miles

0.7mi

Hospital

20 within 20 miles

1.4mi

Airport

DFW — Dallas/Fort Worth International

11.5mi

Post Office

USPS — Roanoke, TX

1.8mi

Critical Amenities

Golf8Nearest 1.3 mi
Camping3Nearest 27 mi
Marina2Nearest 7.2 mi
Winery9Nearest 2.3 mi
Ice Rink0Nearest 18 mi
Gun Range0Nearest 11.8 mi

Quality-of-Life Analysis

Trophy Club, Texas, is a master-planned community in Denton County that consistently ranks among the most affluent suburbs in the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex. With a cost of living index of 181—81% above the national average—the town attracts established professionals, executives, and families seeking a low-crime, high-amenity lifestyle within a 25-minute average commute to Fort Worth and DFW Airport. The population skews toward upper-middle-class households, many of whom work in finance, healthcare, or aviation, drawn by the area’s combination of golf-course living, top-rated schools, and a deliberately small-town feel.

Cost of living, housing, and affordability compared to nearby suburbs

Trophy Club’s cost of living is significantly higher than the U.S. average, driven almost entirely by housing. The median home value sits at $617,000, roughly double the national median and about 15% higher than neighboring Southlake ($535,000) but still below the ultra-premium enclave of Westlake ($1.2 million). Renters face a median monthly rent of $1,821, which is competitive with nearby Flower Mound ($1,850) but notably cheaper than the $2,200+ averages seen in parts of Frisco and Plano. Property taxes in Denton County average around 2.3% of assessed value, meaning a $617,000 home carries an annual tax bill near $14,200—a key factor for budget-conscious buyers. While groceries and healthcare are roughly 10-15% above national norms, utilities and transportation costs align closely with DFW averages, thanks to Texas’s deregulated energy market and the town’s proximity to major highways (SH 114 and I-35W). For buyers accustomed to coastal pricing, Trophy Club offers a relative bargain: a 3,000-square-foot home here costs roughly half what it would in a comparable Los Angeles or New York suburb.

What daily life is like for families: schools, amenities, and commute

Daily life in Trophy Club revolves around the Trophy Club Country Club, which features two 18-hole golf courses (the Hogan and Whitworth courses), a swim and tennis center, and a social calendar that includes holiday parades and summer concerts. The town is served by the Northwest Independent School District (NISD), which consistently earns A ratings from the Texas Education Agency; Trophy Club’s zoned elementary schools—Lakeview, Seven Hills, and Prairie View—all boast student-teacher ratios below 15:1. The average commute of 25.4 minutes is manageable: most residents drive west on SH 114 to Fort Worth’s Alliance corridor (home to Amazon, Bell Textron, and BNSF Railway) or east to DFW Airport and Las Colinas. For daily errands, the Trophy Club Town Center offers a Kroger, a CVS, and a handful of local restaurants, while major shopping and dining are a 10-minute drive to Southlake Town Square or the Alliance Town Center. Crime rates are among the lowest in Denton County: the town reported just 12 violent crimes in 2024, and property crime is roughly 60% below the national average. The trade-off is a quiet, car-dependent rhythm—there is no downtown core, and most social life centers on the country club, school sports, or neighborhood pools.

Trophy Club is best suited for families and professionals who prioritize safety, school quality, and golf-community living over urban walkability or cultural diversity. Empty-nesters and retirees also thrive here, drawn by the low-maintenance lifestyle and proximity to DFW’s medical hubs (Texas Health Presbyterian in Flower Mound is 12 minutes away). Singles or young renters may find the social scene limited and the cost prohibitive. For those who can afford the premium, Trophy Club delivers a predictable, high-quality suburban experience with strong property appreciation—home values rose 8.3% year-over-year as of early 2026, outpacing the DFW average of 5.1%.

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Crime

Overall Crime Grade
A+
Very Safe

Lower crime rates than 97% of comparable U.S. locations.

Crime Rate
3.1
Incidents per 1,000 residents
5yr Trend
+74.9%
Overall crime change since 2020

Violent Crime

5yr+188.2%
Homicide
0.00 / 1k Residents100% below state avg
Robbery
0.00 / 1k Residents100% below state avg
Aggravated Assault
0.07 / 1k Residents97% below state avg

Property Crime

5yr−38.4%
Burglary
0.80 / 1k Residents67% below state avg
Larceny-Theft
1.68 / 1k Residents87% below state avg
Motor Vehicle Theft
0.29 / 1k Residents88% below state avg
Source: FBI Crime Data · 2025

Crime Analysis

Trophy Club, Texas, consistently ranks as one of the safest communities in the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex, with a violent crime rate of just 21.9 incidents per 100,000 residents and a property crime rate of 284.7 per 100,000. These figures place Trophy Club far below both the Texas state average and national benchmarks, making it a standout for safety-conscious homebuyers. The town’s low crime profile is a direct result of its small population, affluent demographic, and proactive local law enforcement, but prospective residents should still consider the broader regional context of progressive criminal justice policies in the Dallas-Fort Worth area.

Crime in context

Trophy Club’s violent crime rate of 21.9 per 100,000 is roughly 90% lower than the national average of 380 per 100,000 and significantly below the Texas state average of 447 per 100,000. Property crime in Trophy Club, at 284.7 per 100,000, is also well under the national rate of 1,954 per 100,000 and the Texas rate of 2,380 per 100,000. These numbers reflect a community where serious offenses like homicide, robbery, and aggravated assault are exceedingly rare. However, Trophy Club is part of the larger Dallas-Fort Worth metro area, where progressive district attorneys in Dallas and Tarrant counties have implemented policies such as reduced cash bail and diversion programs for property offenders. While these policies aim to reduce incarceration, they can lead to higher recidivism and more criminals on the street in surrounding jurisdictions, a factor that residents should weigh when considering regional safety.

What residents experience

Daily life in Trophy Club is characterized by a strong sense of security, with most crime limited to occasional theft from vehicles or minor vandalism. The town’s police department maintains a visible presence, and neighborhood watch programs are active in many subdivisions. Residents report feeling safe walking at night and leaving doors unlocked during the day, a rarity in the metroplex. The low crime rates are supported by the town’s high median household income (over $150,000) and its status as a master-planned community with controlled access points. That said, the influence of progressive judicial policies in nearby Dallas and Fort Worth means that offenders from those cities occasionally travel to Trophy Club to commit property crimes, a pattern seen in many affluent suburbs. This is a manageable risk, but it underscores the importance of basic precautions like securing vehicles and using home security systems.

Neighborhood-level variation

Crime in Trophy Club is remarkably uniform across its neighborhoods, with no statistically significant hotspots. The town’s layout—centered around the Trophy Club Country Club and bounded by Highway 114—creates a cohesive environment where all areas benefit from the same low crime rates. The few reported incidents tend to occur near retail corridors like the Trophy Club Town Center, where transient activity is higher. For the most part, every street in Trophy Club offers the same exceptional safety profile, making it one of the most consistently secure choices in the region.

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* Values derived from national, state, county, city and local statistics and may differ in a specific area. Last updated: 2026-05-16T22:26:59.000Z

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Trophy Club, TX