A planned resort community on the south shore of Lake Travis that began as a single inn on a cattle ranch in 1963 and grew into a city of approximately 19,000 with private golf courses, deep-water marinas, and one of the highest median household incomes in Central Texas.
Lakeway sits on State Highway 620, five miles west of Mansfield Dam, in western Travis County. The city occupies roughly 12 square miles of rolling Hill Country terrain along the southern shoreline of Lake Travis. It is 20 miles from downtown Austin -- a distance that can take 25 minutes or an hour depending on RR 620 traffic, which is the single defining infrastructure problem of the corridor. The 2020 census recorded a population of 19,189 within city limits. The median household income exceeds $190,000. Lakeway is not a small town that grew organically. It was conceived, platted, and marketed as a resort destination from the beginning. That origin still defines its character: manicured, gated in places, oriented toward the lake and the golf courses, and governed by layers of HOA covenants and deed restrictions that keep the streetscape uniform. It is the most developed and affluent community on either shore of Lake Travis.
The lake access, the golf, and the resort infrastructure. Lakeway has more private marinas per mile of shoreline than anywhere else on Travis. It has three major golf courses within its boundaries and a fourth (Flintrock Falls, Jack Nicklaus design) just outside. The Lakeway Resort and Spa -- the original 1963 inn, expanded and renovated multiple times -- still operates as the area's only full-service lakeside hotel. For most visitors, Lakeway is the entry point to the south shore of Lake Travis: the place where you rent a boat, book a tee time, or eat dinner overlooking the water before driving back to Austin.
Before it was Lakeway, this land was a 2,700-acre cattle ranch owned by Houston oilman Jack "Jake" Josey. In early 1962, three Houston businessmen associated with the Gulfmont Hotel Company -- G. Flint Sawtelle, John H. Crooker Jr., and Lee Blocker -- obtained a sixty-day option to purchase the ranch and develop a hotel and resort community. The name "Lakeway" was chosen as a companion to Gulfmont's existing "Fairway Motor Hotel" in McAllen, which overlooked a golf fairway. The partnership expanded to ten investors, who purchased 880 acres (designated "Josey 1") for the inn and initial residential lots, then acquired an additional 2,817 acres in 1964.
Property sales began May 30, 1963. The grand opening of the Lakeway Inn and Marina followed on July 12, 1963 -- the date the community considers its founding. The inn was owned by the ten partners through a subsidiary called Lakeway Joint Ventures and leased to Gulfmont as operators. The Lakeway Land Company, with Sawtelle as president, handled real estate development.
Growth was steady but not explosive in the early years. By 1971, when the Lakeway Land Company was sold to the Alpert Investment Corporation of Dallas, there were 300 homes and 1,000 developed acres. In July 1974, property owners voted to incorporate as the Village of Lakeway -- a 1,200-acre municipality with a three-member governing commission. Newt Herndon served as the first mayor. The population was 1,020 in 1984, 4,044 in 1990, and 8,002 by 2000. The real growth surge came after 2000, as Austin's westward expansion reached the RR 620 corridor and Lakeway transitioned from a weekend-lake community to a primary-residence suburb with excellent schools and lake proximity.
The Hills is a residential and golf community adjacent to Lakeway, centered on two private courses -- Live Oak and Yaupon -- designed by Jack Miller in the 1980s. It functions as part of greater Lakeway and shares the same school district, shopping, and lake access. The Hills Country Club is private, but guests of Lakeway Resort historically had access to the courses through reciprocal arrangements.
Lake Travis is a flood-control storage reservoir on the Colorado River, impounded by Mansfield Dam (completed 1941, 266 feet tall, 7,089 feet long). Its full-pool elevation is 681 feet above mean sea level, at which point it holds 1.17 million acre-feet of water across 18,929 surface acres and 271 miles of shoreline. But Lake Travis is not a constant-level lake. It fluctuates -- sometimes dramatically. During the 2011 drought, the lake dropped to 614 feet, exposing hundreds of acres of lakebed and stranding marinas on dry ground. During floods, it can exceed 700 feet and inundate lakeside parks and low-lying roads.
This fluctuation is the defining fact of living on or visiting Lake Travis. Boat ramps close when the water drops below their reach. Marinas that sit in deep coves remain operational longer than those in shallow arms. The current level (check LCRA Hydromet for live data) determines what you can do on any given day. Do not assume water access is guaranteed -- it depends on the level, and the level depends on rainfall in the Colorado River watershed upstream.
For Lakeway specifically, the south shore's deeper coves and steeper terrain mean that marinas here tend to remain usable at lower levels than north-shore facilities. But "tend to" is not "always." Check before you launch.
| Name | Address | Description | Hours/Season |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lakeway Resort and Spa | 101 Lakeway Dr, Lakeway TX 78734 | Full-service resort hotel. Pool complex, spa, dining (Travis Restaurant), lake views. The original 1963 property, expanded. | Year-round |
| Lakeway Marina | 103 Lakeway Dr, Lakeway TX 78734 | Full-service marina with boat rentals (ski boats, pontoons, jet skis), covered slips, fuel dock. | Seasonal hours vary with lake level |
| Hurst Harbor Marina | 16405 Clara Van St, Austin TX 78734 | 300 covered slips, dry stack storage, certified boat repair, charter boats. Deep-water south shore location. | Year-round; some services seasonal |
| Flintrock Falls Golf Club | 100 Flintrock Trace, Austin TX 78738 | Jack Nicklaus-designed 18-hole course. Semi-private (resort guests can book). Hill Country terrain with elevation changes. | Year-round |
| The Hills Country Club | 26 Club Estates Pkwy, Austin TX 78738 | Two private 18-hole courses: Live Oak (lake-adjacent, walkable) and Yaupon (longer, more wooded). Members and guests only. | Year-round |
| Lakeway City Park | 502 Hurst Creek Rd, Lakeway TX 78734 | 27 acres. Playgrounds, sports courts, swimming pool, pavilions. The main public park in the city. | Dawn to dusk |
| Lake Travis Zipline Adventures | 14529 Pocahontas Trail, Austin TX 78734 | Five ziplines over canyons near the lake. Longest line ~2,800 ft. Reservations required. | Seasonal; weekends in off-season |
| Establishment | Address | Known For |
|---|---|---|
| Travis Restaurant (Lakeway Resort) | 101 Lakeway Dr, Lakeway TX 78734 | Upscale dining with lake views. Steaks, seafood, Sunday brunch. Resort setting. |
| Cafe Lago | 1310 RR 620 S, Lakeway TX 78734 | Italian. Family-owned. Consistent local favorite for pasta and wood-fired pizza. |
| Jack Allen's Kitchen | 3600 N Capital of Texas Hwy, Austin TX 78746 | Farm-to-table Texas cuisine. Technically Westlake, but the go-to dinner spot for the Lakeway corridor. |
| Sundancer Grill | 103 Lakeway Dr, Lakeway TX 78734 | Casual lakeside dining at the marina. Burgers, tacos, cold beer. Best when the water is up and boats are docked outside. |
| Lakeway Craft Bar + Kitchen | 2300 Lohmans Crossing, Lakeway TX 78734 | Craft cocktails, elevated pub food. Date-night spot for locals. |
Lakeway Resort and Spa is the only full-service hotel directly on the lake in this area. It ranges from standard rooms to lakeside suites and is the default choice for visitors who want to wake up on the water. Beyond the resort, the south shore has a substantial short-term rental market -- vacation homes and condos bookable through the usual platforms. Many are in gated communities with private lake access, pools, and docks. During peak summer weekends and major events, these book weeks in advance.
- Getting there: From Austin, take SH 71 west to RR 620 north, or take Loop 360 to RR 2222 to RR 620. Both routes converge on RR 620, which is the spine of the south shore corridor. Expect congestion on RR 620 during rush hours and summer weekends.
- Lake level: Check LCRA Hydromet (hydromet.lcra.org) before planning any water activity. Marinas and ramps close at low levels.
- Two-shore separation: There is no direct drive across Lake Travis. To reach the north shore (Lago Vista, Jonestown), you must drive east through Austin or cross at Mansfield Dam -- either way, 30-45 minutes minimum.
- Cell service: Reliable throughout Lakeway and the RR 620 corridor.
- Groceries and fuel: H-E-B at Lakeway (Lohmans Crossing), Randalls, multiple fuel stations on RR 620.
- Schools: Lake Travis ISD -- consistently rated among the top districts in the Austin metro.
Lakeway is what happens when Houston money meets Hill Country water. The community was purpose-built as a resort in 1963, and sixty years later it still functions as one -- just with 19,000 permanent residents living inside what was originally a vacation destination. That dual identity (resort infrastructure, suburban population) makes it the most fully-serviced community on Lake Travis. It is not intimate in the way that smaller Hill Country towns are intimate. It is convenient, well-maintained, and oriented toward the lake in a way that few other communities can match, because it was designed to be exactly that from the beginning.
Part of the lakeway.ai network -- local guides for the south shore of Lake Travis, powered by Backroads Hill Country.