An unincorporated community on a peninsula of Lake Travis's south shore -- home to The Oasis (which bills itself as the largest outdoor restaurant in Texas, capacity 2,800, built on a cliff 450 feet above the water) and a handful of marinas that make it the go-out-on-the-water side of the south shore.
Hudson Bend is not a city. It has no mayor, no city council, no police department, and no formal boundaries. It is an unincorporated community in northwestern Travis County, roughly 16 miles from downtown Austin, occupying a peninsula that juts into Lake Travis between two deep coves. The population was approximately 2,369 at the 2000 census (the most recent reliable count for the area). Residents are a mix of retirees, Austin commuters, and families who chose the area for its lake access and relative quiet compared to the more developed Lakeway corridor to the south. What Hudson Bend has -- and what defines it -- is water access. The peninsula geography means shoreline on multiple sides, deep coves that hold water even at lower lake levels, and a concentration of marinas and boat-related businesses. If Lakeway is the resort side and Bee Cave is the shopping side, Hudson Bend is the boat-ramp-and-sunset side of the south shore.
1. The Oasis on Lake Travis. Established in 1982, The Oasis sits on a cliff 450 feet above the lake surface. It bills itself as the largest outdoor restaurant in Texas -- 30,000 square feet of tiered decks with a capacity of approximately 2,800 guests, all facing west for sunset views. It calls itself the "Sunset Capital of Texas." The food is secondary to the view and the experience; locals will tell you that honestly. But the sunset from those decks, when the lake is full and the sky cooperates, is genuinely one of the best in Central Texas.
2. Marina concentration. Hudson Bend's coves host several marinas offering boat slips, rentals, fuel, and launch access. The deep-water coves here tend to remain navigable at lower lake levels than shallower areas, making Hudson Bend one of the more reliable boat-access points on the south shore -- though "reliable" is always relative on Lake Travis.
3. The peninsula feel. Hudson Bend is surrounded by water on three sides. This gives it a geographic identity distinct from the linear RR 620 corridor: you drive out to Hudson Bend, not through it. The roads dead-end at the water. The community feels more isolated and lake-oriented than its distance from Austin would suggest.
The area was first settled by the Wiley Hudson family in the early 1850s. Hudson, an emigrant from Arkansas, secured a land grant in 1854 near a bend of the Colorado River -- the geographic feature that gave both the family and the community their name. By 1860, four families lived in the region. They farmed the thin-soiled land and used three river fords (Marshall Ford, Watkins Ford, and Sylvester Ford) to cross the Colorado, traveling to Anderson Mill to grind corn.
By the 1890s, Hudson Bend had a school and a church. The community functioned as a farming and ranching settlement for nearly a century, spread across approximately 4,000 acres of river-bottom and hillside land. That changed permanently in the early 1940s with the construction of Marshall Ford Dam (now Mansfield Dam) and the impoundment of Lake Travis. Hudson Bend lost nearly half its acreage to the rising water. A community cemetery was relocated to Teck. The agricultural economy was finished.
What replaced it was recreation. In the 1940s, developers S.C. McIntosh, Hugh Webb, and Jesse James created the first residential subdivisions: Hudson Bend Colony No. 1 and Hudson Bend Colony No. 2. A volunteer fire department organized in the 1950s. As Austin grew westward through the latter twentieth century, Hudson Bend transitioned from a rural remnant to a lakeside residential community. In 1978, the community received a Texas Historical Marker commemorating its role in the area's development.
The Oasis opened in 1982, transforming Hudson Bend from a quiet residential peninsula into a regional dining destination. The restaurant's success (and its visibility -- you can see the tiered decks from across the lake) put Hudson Bend on the map for visitors who might otherwise never have driven out to the peninsula.
Hudson Bend's peninsula geography gives it shoreline exposure on multiple sides -- Hurst Creek Cove to the south, the main body of Lake Travis to the north and west. The coves here are relatively deep, which means they hold water longer during drawdowns. This is a meaningful practical advantage: when the lake drops 20 feet, shallow-cove marinas elsewhere on the south shore may be sitting on mud, while Hudson Bend's deeper facilities can still operate.
That said, Lake Travis's fluctuation affects Hudson Bend like everywhere else. At low levels, the exposed lakebed below The Oasis is dramatic -- hundreds of yards of dry limestone where water should be. The restaurant's sunset view doesn't change (it's 450 feet up), but the lake below it can look very different depending on the season and the year.
| Name | Address | Description | Hours/Season |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Oasis on Lake Travis | 6550 Comanche Trail, Austin TX 78732 | Largest restaurant in Texas. Tiered decks 450 ft above lake. Sunset views west. Tex-Mex, margaritas. The view is the point. | Sun-Thu 11am-9pm, Fri-Sat 11am-10pm (seasonal variation) |
| Oasis Texas Brewing Company | 6550 Comanche Trail, Austin TX 78732 | Craft brewery adjacent to The Oasis. Taproom with same cliff-top views. Rotating taps. | Same complex as The Oasis |
| Carlos'n Charlie's | 5973 Hiline Rd, Austin TX 78734 | Lakeside Tex-Mex and bar on the water. Boat dock for arriving by water. Casual, loud, fun. | Seasonal; check hours |
| Hudson Bend area marinas | Various locations off Hudson Bend Rd | Multiple small marinas in the coves. Boat slips, some rentals, fuel. Check individual operators for current status and lake-level accessibility. | Seasonal; level-dependent |
| Establishment | Address | Known For |
|---|---|---|
| The Oasis on Lake Travis | 6550 Comanche Trail, Austin TX 78732 | Sunset views, Tex-Mex, margaritas. Capacity 2,800. The food is adequate; the view is extraordinary. Go for sunset, not for the menu. |
| Oasis Texas Brewing Company | 6550 Comanche Trail, Austin TX 78732 | House-brewed craft beer with the same cliff-top setting. Less crowded than the main restaurant. |
| Carlos'n Charlie's | 5973 Hiline Rd, Austin TX 78734 | Boat-up restaurant. Casual Mexican food, frozen drinks, lake-level dining. Seasonal. |
| Gino's Italian Restaurant | 6550 Comanche Trail #200, Austin TX 78732 | Italian dining in the Oasis complex. Quieter alternative to the main restaurant. |
There are no hotels in Hudson Bend. The area is residential and unincorporated -- no commercial lodging infrastructure exists. Visitors typically stay in Lakeway (10 minutes south via RR 620) or in short-term rentals scattered through the Hudson Bend neighborhoods. Some lakefront properties rent well on weekends, but inventory is limited and books early in summer.
- Getting there: From Austin, take RR 620 north/west to Hudson Bend Road or Comanche Trail. The drive is approximately 25 minutes from downtown. From Lakeway, it is 10 minutes north on RR 620.
- The Oasis on weekends: Expect a wait for seating, especially 60-90 minutes before sunset on summer Saturdays. There is no reservation system for the main restaurant. Arrive early or go on a weekday.
- Lake access: Several marinas in the coves offer slip rentals and some boat rentals. All are level-dependent. Call ahead to confirm water access.
- Not walkable: Hudson Bend is car-dependent. The Oasis complex is the only concentration of businesses; everything else is residential.
- Unincorporated: No city services. Fire protection via Hudson Bend VFD (volunteer). Law enforcement via Travis County Sheriff.
Hudson Bend is the south shore's most direct relationship with the water. Lakeway has the resort and the golf. Bee Cave has the shopping. Briarcliff has the park and the quiet. Hudson Bend has the marinas, the boat ramps, and the cliff-top restaurant where 2,800 people watch the sun drop behind the Hill Country on a Saturday evening. It is the place where the south shore actually touches the lake -- not through a resort lobby or a gated community, but through a boat dock and a sunset deck.
Hudson Bend's physical shape -- a peninsula extending into Lake Travis between Hurst Creek Cove and the main lake body -- creates a community that feels more isolated than its 16-mile distance from downtown Austin would suggest. The roads that serve Hudson Bend (Hudson Bend Road, Comanche Trail, Hiline Road) are two-lane, winding, and dead-end at the water or loop back to RR 620. There is no through-traffic. You only drive into Hudson Bend if you are going to Hudson Bend.
This geography has preserved a community character that the more accessible parts of the south shore have lost. Hudson Bend lacks the commercial development of Bee Cave, the resort infrastructure of Lakeway, and the gated-community feel of The Hills. Houses range from modest 1960s ranch homes to newer lakefront construction, often on the same street. There are no HOA-mandated landscaping standards on most of the peninsula. Boats on trailers sit in driveways. The volunteer fire department hosts community events. It feels more like a lake community from the 1970s than a 2020s Austin suburb -- because, in many ways, it still is one.
The community has resisted incorporation multiple times. Residents consistently vote against forming a city government, preferring the lower-regulation environment of unincorporated Travis County. This means no city zoning (Travis County has limited land-use authority in unincorporated areas), no city property tax, and no city services beyond what the county provides. The tradeoff is that development decisions are made at the county level, with less local input than incorporated cities enjoy.
The Oasis has expanded well beyond the original 1982 restaurant. The complex now includes Oasis Texas Brewing Company (a craft brewery with its own taproom), several additional restaurants (including Gino's Italian and a Tex-Mex cantina), retail shops, and event spaces. The Starlight Terrace on the top level hosts weddings and private events with the same sunset view. During peak season, the complex employs several hundred people and generates the majority of commercial activity on the peninsula.
The restaurant's relationship with the lake level is worth noting. The Oasis sits 450 feet above the water on a limestone cliff -- so its view is always dramatic regardless of the lake level. But the experience of looking down at a full, blue lake versus looking down at exposed white limestone and distant puddles is meaningfully different. At full pool, the lake extends to the horizon below the decks. During the 2011 drought, visitors looked down at what resembled a canyon with a creek at the bottom. Both are striking; only one matches the postcard.
Part of the lakeway.ai network -- local guides for the south shore of Lake Travis, powered by Backroads Hill Country.