A small village on the western end of Lake Travis's south shore -- 2,000 residents, no commercial district, and one famous neighbor: Willie Nelson's Luck Ranch, which adjoins the community and has shaped its identity for nearly fifty years.
Briarcliff is an incorporated village in Travis County, roughly 30 miles west of downtown Austin via State Highway 71. The 2020 census recorded 2,062 residents within its boundaries. There is no downtown, no retail strip, no restaurant row. Briarcliff is residential -- homes on wooded lots, many with lake views or lake access, connected by winding two-lane roads through cedar and live oak. Its character is defined by what it lacks (commercial development, traffic, density) as much as by what it has (proximity to the lake, proximity to Pace Bend Park, and proximity to Willie Nelson). The village sits at the western end of the south shore, where Lake Travis narrows and the terrain gets rougher. It is quieter and more rustic than Lakeway (10 miles east) and more remote from Austin's commercial infrastructure. Residents drive to Bee Cave or Lakeway for groceries and services. The tradeoff is space, quiet, and a stretch of shoreline that feels less suburban than the eastern south shore.
1. Willie Nelson's Luck Ranch. The 700-acre property adjoins Briarcliff. Nelson purchased the former Pedernales Country Club in 1979 and built "Luck" -- a replica Old West town used for recording, filming, and private events. The Luck Reunion music festival (held annually in March) draws national acts and devoted fans to the property. Nelson's presence has defined Briarcliff's cultural identity for decades, even though Luck Ranch is technically its own entity.
2. Pace Bend Park proximity. Travis County's Pace Bend Park -- 1,300 acres with 9 miles of Lake Travis shoreline, limestone cliffs, primitive camping, and swimming -- is immediately adjacent to Briarcliff. It is one of the best public-access points on the entire lake, and Briarcliff residents live minutes from its entrance.
3. The quiet end of the south shore. Briarcliff is where the south shore transitions from suburban (Lakeway, Bee Cave) to rural (Spicewood, the ranch land beyond). It offers lake proximity without the density, HOA covenants, or commercial traffic of the eastern corridor.
The land that became Briarcliff was ranch and farm country through the mid-twentieth century -- part of the broader rural landscape of western Travis County. Development began in the 1970s and 1980s as Austin's growth pushed westward and Lake Travis became a recreational draw. The village incorporated in 1984, primarily to establish local control over land use and prevent annexation. At incorporation, the population was 129.
Willie Nelson's arrival in 1979 -- purchasing the Pedernales Country Club and its surrounding acreage -- was the single most significant event in the community's history. Nelson converted the golf course property into a private compound, built the Western-movie-set town of Luck, and established a recording studio on the grounds. Over the following decades, Luck Ranch became a cultural landmark: a place where albums were recorded, films were shot, and an annual music festival (Luck Reunion, since 2003) brought thousands of visitors to the area each March.
The village grew slowly: 335 residents in 1990, 895 in 2000, 2,062 in 2020. Growth has been constrained by terrain (steep, rocky hillsides), limited road infrastructure (SH 71 is the only arterial), and the absence of commercial development within village limits. Briarcliff has remained residential by choice -- its zoning and deed restrictions discourage commercial uses, preserving the rural-residential character that attracted residents in the first place.
Briarcliff's shoreline sits on the western portion of Lake Travis, where the reservoir narrows as it extends toward its upper reaches. The terrain is steep -- limestone bluffs dropping to the water, with limited flat shoreline. This means fewer beaches and gentle swim areas, but dramatic cliff views and deep water close to shore (when the lake is up).
The lake-level caveat applies here as strongly as anywhere on Travis: when the lake drops, Briarcliff's steep shoreline means the water recedes dramatically, and access points that work at 670 feet may be high and dry at 650. Pace Bend Park's swimming areas are similarly level-dependent -- the "beach" at Pace Bend exists only when the lake is reasonably full.
The surrounding landscape is classic Edwards Plateau: Ashe juniper (cedar), live oak, prickly pear, thin limestone soils, and seasonal creeks that run only after rain. The terrain is too rocky and steep for agriculture, which is why it remained undeveloped longer than flatter land to the east.
| Name | Address | Description | Hours/Season |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pace Bend Park | 2011 Pace Bend Rd N, Spicewood TX 78669 | 1,300-acre Travis County park. 9 miles of Lake Travis shoreline. Cliff camping, swimming, boat ramp, hiking. Limestone cliffs 10-50 ft. | 7am-10pm daily. $10/vehicle weekdays, $15 weekends. Level-dependent water access. |
| Luck Ranch / Luck Reunion | Briarcliff area (private, no public address) | Willie Nelson's 700-acre compound. Old West town, recording studio. Luck Reunion festival in March (ticketed). Not open to public outside events. | March (Luck Reunion); private otherwise |
| Briarcliff Marina | Off Briarcliff Dr, Briarcliff TX 78669 | Small marina with covered slips. Residential feel. Check current status -- smaller marinas are most affected by low lake levels. | Seasonal; level-dependent |
There are no restaurants within Briarcliff village limits. Residents and visitors drive to:
- Bee Cave (15-20 minutes east on SH 71) for the Hill Country Galleria dining options
- Lakeway (10-15 minutes east) for lakeside restaurants
- Spicewood (10 minutes west) for Poodie's Hilltop Bar & Grill (live music, burgers, a Willie Nelson hangout) or the Spicewood General Store
The absence of commercial dining is part of Briarcliff's character -- it is a residential community, not a destination town.
There are no hotels in Briarcliff. Short-term vacation rentals exist on some lakefront properties, but inventory is limited. Most visitors to this part of the south shore stay in Lakeway (Lakeway Resort) or camp at Pace Bend Park (20 improved sites with water/electricity, plus extensive primitive cliff-top camping).
- Getting there: From Austin, take SH 71 west approximately 30 miles. Briarcliff is accessed via Bee Creek Road or Briarcliff Drive off SH 71. The drive is 35-40 minutes without traffic.
- No services: There is no grocery store, gas station, or commercial retail within village limits. Plan accordingly.
- Lake access: Dependent on lake level. Pace Bend Park is the most reliable public access point in the area.
- Cell service: Spotty in some areas, particularly in creek bottoms and on the western edge near Pace Bend.
- Luck Reunion: If attending in March, book lodging months in advance and expect traffic on SH 71 and local roads. The festival is ticketed and does not allow walk-ups.
Briarcliff is the south shore's proof that not everything on Lake Travis has to be developed, gated, and golf-coursed. It is 2,000 people on wooded lots, with no commercial strip and no resort infrastructure, living next to one of the best public parks on the lake and one of the most famous musicians in American history. The village exists because some people wanted lake proximity without the Lakeway treatment -- and were willing to drive 15 minutes for groceries to get it.
Pace Bend Park deserves specific treatment because it is the primary public attraction near Briarcliff and one of the most significant public-access points on all of Lake Travis. The park occupies a peninsula that juts into the lake's western reaches, creating shoreline on three sides. Travis County acquired the land in the 1970s and developed it as a regional park.
The park's 1,300 acres include two distinct zones. The eastern side has improved campsites (20 sites with water and electricity, plus restrooms and showers), a boat ramp, and a swimming beach that exists when the lake level cooperates. The western and northern sides are primitive -- cliff-top camping on limestone ledges overlooking the lake, with no facilities beyond portable toilets. This primitive camping is what draws most visitors: you can park your vehicle at the cliff's edge, set up camp on the rock, and fall asleep to the sound of water below. The cliffs range from 10 to 50 feet above the water surface (at full pool), and cliff jumping is common though unsupervised and at your own risk.
The park charges $10 per vehicle on weekdays and $15 on weekends. It does not take reservations for primitive camping -- sites are first-come, first-served, and on summer weekends the park can fill by mid-morning. The boat ramp closes when the lake drops below approximately 650 feet MSL. The swimming beach disappears entirely below 660 feet. Check the lake level before driving out.
The Luck Reunion music festival began in 2003 as a small gathering of musicians and friends on Willie Nelson's property during South by Southwest week in Austin. It has grown into a nationally recognized event -- typically held on a Thursday in March, drawing 2,000-3,000 attendees to the ranch for a day of live music across multiple stages set among the Old West buildings of Luck town.
The festival's character is deliberately intimate. Unlike large Austin festivals (ACL, SXSW), Luck Reunion is single-day, limited-capacity, and curated toward Americana, country, folk, and roots music. Past performers have included Margo Price, Charley Crockett, Nathaniel Rateliff, and Nelson himself. Tickets sell out quickly and are not cheap. The event brings significant traffic to SH 71 and the Briarcliff area for one day each March -- something residents have learned to plan around.
Beyond the festival, Nelson's presence has shaped Briarcliff's identity in subtler ways. The community has a live-and-let-live ethos that mirrors its most famous resident -- less concerned with property values and deed restrictions than Lakeway, more tolerant of eccentricity, and generally resistant to the kind of development pressure that has transformed the eastern south shore. Whether that's directly attributable to Nelson or simply reflects the kind of people who chose to live near him is an open question, but the correlation is real.
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