A small city on the Sandy Creek Arm of Lake Travis -- founded by two brothers in the 1930s who bought cheap land before Mansfield Dam turned their property into lakefront, and now home to 2,365 residents who live at the quieter, less developed end of the north shore.
Jonestown sits on FM 1431 at the western end of the north shore corridor, roughly 35 miles northwest of downtown Austin. The city occupies land along the Sandy Creek Arm and Big Devil's Hollow of Lake Travis -- two deep coves that define the community's geography and its relationship to the water. The 2020 census recorded a population of 2,365; current estimates approach 2,750. Jonestown is incorporated (since the 1980s, to block Austin's annexation) and has a mayor-council government, but it remains small enough that the volunteer fire department is a social institution and the city park doubles as the community gathering place. Jonestown is the north shore's western terminus. Past Jonestown, FM 1431 continues toward Marble Falls and the Highland Lakes, but the Lake Travis communities end here. It is quieter than Lago Vista (5 miles east), with less commercial development and a more rural feel. There is no H-E-B, no chain restaurant, no strip mall. What there is: lake access, a county park, a few local businesses, and a community that has maintained its small-town character through decades of growth pressure from Austin's expansion.
1. Jones Brothers Park. The city's primary public park and lake access point, named for the founding brothers. Boat ramp, fishing pier, swimming area, pavilions, and playgrounds. It is the most accessible public launch point on the western north shore -- when the lake level cooperates.
2. Sandy Creek Arm. The narrow, sheltered arm of Lake Travis that defines Jonestown's waterfront. Calmer than the main body of the lake, good for kayaking and fishing, but vulnerable to low water levels because of its shallow upper reaches.
3. The quiet end. Jonestown is where the Austin commuter corridor ends and the Hill Country begins. The traffic, the construction, and the suburban development that characterize the FM 1431 corridor east of here (Cedar Park, Leander, Lago Vista) have not yet reached Jonestown in the same way. That is changing -- slowly -- but for now, Jonestown retains a pace that the eastern corridor has lost.
Jonestown was created by two brothers: Warren and Emmett A. Jones. In the late 1930s, with Mansfield Dam under construction on the Colorado River, the Jones brothers recognized that land along the future lakeshore would become valuable. They purchased acreage along what would become the Sandy Creek Arm of Lake Travis -- cheap, rough Hill Country land that no one else wanted because it was too rocky for farming and too remote for commuting.
Their bet paid off. When the dam was completed in 1941 and Lake Travis filled, the Jones brothers' land became waterfront property. They began selling lots and developing the area as a residential community. Growth was slow -- the north shore's isolation (no direct bridge to the south shore, long drives to Austin) kept the population small through the mid-twentieth century.
By the 1960s and 1970s, Jonestown had a modest population of retirees, weekenders, and a few full-time families. FM 1431 improvements in the 1970s and 1980s made the commute to Austin more feasible, and the community began to grow. Jonestown incorporated in the 1980s -- along with Lago Vista and Point Venture -- to prevent annexation by Austin. The population was 683 in 1988, 1,662 by 2000, and 2,365 by 2020.
The community has maintained its small-town feel partly by choice (limited commercial zoning) and partly by geography (the terrain is steep and rocky, limiting large-scale development). Jones Brothers Park, named for the founders, remains the community's center -- the place where residents gather for Fourth of July celebrations, fishing tournaments, and weekend cookouts.
The Sandy Creek Arm is a long, narrow inlet of Lake Travis that extends northwest from the main body of the lake. It is sheltered from the wind and wake that affect the open lake, making it popular with kayakers, paddleboarders, and fishermen. The upper reaches are shallow, however, and the arm is among the first areas of Lake Travis to lose water access during drawdowns.
At full pool (681 feet MSL), the Sandy Creek Arm extends several miles and provides deep-water access near its mouth. At 660 feet -- a level reached during moderate droughts -- the upper arm is dry and the boat ramp at Jones Brothers Park may be unusable. At 640 feet (severe drought, as in 2011), the arm is largely empty. This fluctuation is the defining constraint on Jonestown's lake access: the community is "on the lake" only when the lake is reasonably full.
Sandy Creek Park, a 50-acre Travis County facility adjacent to Jonestown, provides additional public access to the arm -- swimming, fishing, birding, and nature walks. It is a quieter alternative to the larger county parks and rarely crowded.
| Name | Address | Description | Hours/Season |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jones Brothers Park | 18024 Lakepoint Dr, Jonestown TX 78645 | City park. Boat ramp, fishing pier, swimming area, playgrounds, pavilions, volleyball courts. Named for founding brothers. | Dawn to dusk. Boat ramp level-dependent. |
| Sandy Creek Park | 9500 Lime Creek Rd, Leander TX 78641 | 50-acre Travis County park on Sandy Creek Arm. Swimming, fishing, birding, nature walks. Quiet, rarely crowded. | Dawn to dusk. Free. Level-dependent. |
| Jonestown Community Park | FM 1431, Jonestown TX 78645 | Small city park with sports courts, walking trail, community pavilion. | Dawn to dusk |
| Lago Vista Golf Course | 20409 Earhart Ln, Lago Vista TX 78645 | Nearest golf -- 5 minutes east in Lago Vista. 18 holes, public. | Year-round |
| Establishment | Address | Known For |
|---|---|---|
| Jonestown Cafe | FM 1431, Jonestown TX 78645 | Breakfast and lunch. Small-town diner. Biscuits and gravy, burgers. Cash-friendly. |
| Turn Back Time | 18649 FM 1431, Jonestown TX 78645 | Antique shop with small cafe. Coffee, pastries, sandwiches. Browsing encouraged. |
| Lago Vista restaurants | 5 minutes east on FM 1431 | D'Vine Bar & Bistro, Cafe on the Lake, Dink's BBQ, and other options in Lago Vista's commercial strip. |
There are no hotels in Jonestown. Vacation rentals (lake houses, cabins) are available through booking platforms, with limited inventory. Most visitors to the western north shore stay in Lago Vista or in short-term rentals. For full-service accommodations, the south shore (Lakeway Resort) is 35-45 minutes away.
- Getting there: From Austin, take US 183 north to FM 1431 west, through Cedar Park, Leander, and Lago Vista. Jonestown is 5 miles past Lago Vista. Total drive: 40-50 minutes.
- Limited services: No grocery store (nearest H-E-B is in Lago Vista, 5 minutes east). No pharmacy. Limited fuel. Plan accordingly.
- Lake access: Jones Brothers Park boat ramp is the primary public launch. Level-dependent -- call the city or check LCRA Hydromet before trailering a boat.
- Cell service: Generally reliable on FM 1431. Spotty near the water and in creek bottoms.
- Flooding: The Sandy Creek Arm can flood rapidly during heavy rain events. Low-water crossings on Lime Creek Road and other local roads may become impassable. Do not drive through standing water.
Jonestown is where the north shore gets quiet. Lago Vista has the grocery store and the commercial strip; Jonestown has the park, the boat ramp, and the small-town pace. It exists because two brothers in the 1930s had the foresight to buy cheap land before a dam turned it into lakefront -- and because their community chose to stay small rather than chase the growth that transformed the eastern corridor. For visitors, Jonestown offers the most accessible public lake access on the western north shore. For residents, it offers something increasingly rare in the Austin metro: a place where you can still know your neighbors.
Jonestown's population of 2,365 makes it small enough that the city government operates with a lean staff and relies heavily on volunteer labor. The Jonestown Volunteer Fire Department is both an emergency service and a social institution -- its annual fish fry and Fourth of July celebration are among the community's best-attended events. The city park hosts a bass fishing tournament each year that draws anglers from across Central Texas, continuing a tradition that dates to the early 2000s when Jones Brothers Park hosted its first 200-angler event.
The residential character is mixed: older homes from the 1960s and 1970s (modest ranch-style houses on large lots, many with mature live oaks) sit alongside newer construction from the 2000s and 2010s. There are no gated communities and no HOA-mandated uniformity. Boats on trailers in driveways are common. The aesthetic is functional rather than curated -- a working lake community, not a resort.
Commercial development is limited to a small cluster of businesses on FM 1431 near the city's eastern edge. A convenience store, a small cafe, an antique shop, and a few service businesses constitute the entirety of Jonestown's commercial sector. This is by design -- the community has historically resisted commercial zoning changes, preferring to keep the town residential and send shopping traffic to Lago Vista.
Jonestown's location on the Sandy Creek watershed makes it vulnerable to flash flooding during heavy rain events. The most significant recent event occurred in October 2018, when extreme rainfall in the upper Llano River watershed sent record inflows into Lake Travis. The lake rose rapidly, and low-lying areas along the Sandy Creek Arm experienced flooding. Lime Creek Road -- a key connector between Jonestown and points south -- was submerged and impassable for days.
The 2018 flood was a reminder that Lake Travis's flood-control function works in both directions: the lake prevents downstream flooding in Austin, but communities on its shores are subject to rapid rises when upstream rainfall is extreme. Jonestown's lower-elevation properties near the Sandy Creek Arm are in the flood zone, and residents in those areas maintain flood insurance and evacuation plans. The city has invested in improved drainage and warning systems since 2018, but the geographic reality remains: living on a flood-control reservoir means accepting that the water can come up fast.
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