The largest community on the north shore of Lake Travis -- a planned recreational development from the early 1960s that incorporated in 1984 to block Austin's annexation, and has since grown from a weekend-lake community of 900 into a city of nearly 10,000 that functions as the north shore's only real town.
Lago Vista sits on a peninsula of rugged Hill Country terrain on the northern shore of Lake Travis, roughly 30 miles northwest of downtown Austin via FM 1431 (which locals call "the 1431"). The 2020 census recorded 8,892 residents; current estimates put the population near 9,650. The name -- "Lake View" in Spanish and Italian -- was chosen by the developers who platted the community in the early 1960s as a recreational and retirement destination. Travis County is the jurisdiction; Lago Vista is the only incorporated city of significant size on the north shore. Lago Vista is not Lakeway. That distinction matters. The south shore has the resort, the Nicklaus golf courses, the $190,000 median household income. The north shore has Lago Vista -- more affordable, less polished, more local. The median home price here is roughly half of Lakeway's. The restaurants are family-owned rather than resort-affiliated. The marinas are smaller. The community feels like a lake town where people actually live, not a resort where people visit. That is both its limitation and its appeal.
1. The north shore's town center. Lago Vista has the H-E-B, the pharmacy, the hardware store, the library, and the restaurants that serve the entire north shore -- Jonestown, Point Venture, and the unincorporated areas between them. Without Lago Vista's commercial infrastructure, the north shore would be a 40-minute drive from basic services.
2. Public lake access. Between the city's own parks, the POA (Property Owners Association) facilities, and adjacent Travis County parks (Arkansas Bend, Gloster Bend), the north shore has more public shoreline access per capita than the south shore. You do not need to belong to a yacht club to get on the water here.
3. The airport. Rusty Allen Airport (RYW) is a single-runway general aviation field within city limits. It is one of the few community airports in the Lake Travis area and gives Lago Vista a quirky distinction -- you can fly into a lake town.
The north shore's human history extends back 10,000 to 15,000 years, evidenced by the 1983 discovery of "Leanderthal Lady" -- a prehistoric woman's remains found near the community of Leander, dating to approximately 10,000 BCE. The area was home to Apache and Comanche peoples for centuries before European settlement.
The modern story begins with Lohman's Crossing -- a bridge constructed in 1931 across the Colorado River to connect the north and south shores. When Mansfield Dam was completed in 1941 and Lake Travis filled, Lohman's Crossing was submerged. The north shore became geographically isolated, accessible only by long drives around the lake's upper reaches or across the dam itself. This isolation defined the area for decades.
Construction workers who built the dam and related infrastructure in the 1940s and 1950s settled on the north shore, drawn by the quiet and the water. World War II veterans and military retirees followed in the 1950s and 1960s. Developers recognized the recreational potential and began platting residential lots. Lago Vista was conceived in the early 1960s as a planned community -- lots sold to Austin professionals and retirees seeking weekend lake access and eventual retirement homes.
FM 1431 was upgraded to handle modern traffic, and bus service to Austin was initiated. Growth was slow but steady: approximately 900 residents by the late 1970s, most of them part-time. The community had a golf course (Highland Lakes Golf Club, later Lago Vista Golf Course), a small commercial strip, and a network of residential streets winding through cedar and live oak.
In the 1980s, the City of Austin attempted to annex the north shore communities. Lago Vista, Jonestown, and Point Venture all voted to incorporate as independent municipalities -- Lago Vista in 1984 -- specifically to block this annexation. The incorporation established a council-manager government and gave the community local control over zoning, development, and services.
Growth accelerated after 2000 as Austin's expansion pushed housing demand outward and FM 1431 improvements reduced commute times. The population roughly doubled between 2000 (4,400) and 2020 (8,892). New subdivisions filled the remaining platted lots, and commercial development along FM 1431 brought chain retail and restaurants to a community that had previously relied on a single general store.
Lake Travis's north shore is defined by the same fluctuation that affects the south shore -- the lake is a flood-control reservoir, not a constant-level lake, and water levels can vary by 60 feet or more between drought and flood. The north shore's terrain is generally less steep than the south shore, which means that when the lake drops, the water recedes farther from the shoreline. Boat ramps that work at 670 feet may be a quarter-mile from water at 640 feet.
The north shore's coves and inlets -- Sandy Creek Arm, Arkansas Bend, Gloster Bend -- provide sheltered water when the lake is up, but they are among the first areas to go dry during drawdowns. This is the fundamental practical reality of living on or visiting the north shore: water access is conditional. Check the LCRA Hydromet (hydromet.lcra.org) before planning any water activity.
When the lake is up, the north shore offers excellent fishing (largemouth bass, white bass, catfish), swimming at multiple public parks, and boating access through several ramps and small marinas. The water is generally less crowded than the south shore -- fewer party barges, fewer wake boats, more kayaks and fishing boats.
| Name | Address | Description | Hours/Season |
|---|---|---|---|
| Arkansas Bend Park | 14900 Arkansas Bend Trail, Lago Vista TX 78645 | 323-acre Travis County park. Hiking trails (5 miles), fishing, swimming, birding. Three peninsulas jutting into lake. | Dawn to dusk. Free. Level-dependent water access. |
| Lago Vista Golf Course | 20409 Earhart Ln, Lago Vista TX 78645 | 18-hole public course. Hill Country terrain. Moderate difficulty. | Year-round. Tee times: (512) 382-6529 |
| Rusty Allen Airport (RYW) | 1901 Lohman Ford Rd, Lago Vista TX 78645 | General aviation airport. Single runway (4,000 ft). Fuel available. | Daylight hours. No commercial service. |
| Bar K Park | 7900 Bar K Ranch Rd, Lago Vista TX 78645 | City park with lake access, playground, pavilion, swimming area (when lake is up). | Dawn to dusk |
| Lago Vista Library | 7300 FM 1431, Lago Vista TX 78645 | Public library. Community meeting space. Local history collection. | Mon-Sat; check hours |
| Establishment | Address | Known For |
|---|---|---|
| D'Vine Bar & Bistro | 20616 FM 1431, Lago Vista TX 78645 | Wine bar and bistro. Elevated casual dining. Local date-night spot. |
| Cafe on the Lake | 7100 FM 1431, Lago Vista TX 78645 | Breakfast and lunch. Diner-style. Pancakes, burgers, comfort food. Morning gathering spot for locals. |
| Lago Vista Brewing | FM 1431, Lago Vista TX 78645 | Craft brewery with taproom. Local beers, food trucks on weekends. |
| Mama Fu's Asian House | 20616 FM 1431, Lago Vista TX 78645 | Pan-Asian. Noodles, rice bowls, sushi. Family-friendly. |
| Dink's BBQ | 7900 FM 1431, Lago Vista TX 78645 | Texas barbecue. Brisket, ribs, sausage. Casual counter service. |
Lago Vista has limited hotel inventory -- a few small motels and vacation rentals. The north shore is not a resort destination; most visitors are day-trippers from Austin or guests of residents. Short-term rentals (lake houses, cabins) are available through booking platforms, with more inventory in summer. For full-service hotel accommodations, the south shore (Lakeway Resort) is the closest option -- a 30-45 minute drive via Mansfield Dam or through Austin.
- Getting there: From Austin, take US 183 north to FM 1431 west (Cedar Park/Lago Vista). The drive is 35-45 minutes depending on traffic through Cedar Park and Leander. Alternatively, take RR 620 north across Mansfield Dam, then FM 1431 west -- longer but avoids suburban traffic.
- Two-shore separation: There is no bridge across Lake Travis between the north and south shores. To reach Lakeway or Bee Cave, drive east through Cedar Park/Austin or cross at Mansfield Dam. Either route is 30-45 minutes minimum.
- Lake level: Check LCRA Hydromet before planning water activities. North shore ramps and parks are level-dependent.
- Cell service: Generally reliable along FM 1431 corridor. Spotty in some park areas and coves.
- Groceries: H-E-B on FM 1431 is the primary grocery for the entire north shore. Plan accordingly.
- Schools: Lago Vista ISD -- small district serving the north shore communities.
Lago Vista is the north shore's anchor -- the only community with enough commercial infrastructure to function as a town rather than a residential subdivision. It has the grocery store, the gas stations, the restaurants, the library, and the golf course. Without Lago Vista, the north shore would be a collection of residential streets with no center. The community's incorporation in 1984 preserved its independence from Austin, and its steady growth since has given the north shore a viable, if modest, town center. It is not glamorous. It is functional, affordable, and oriented toward the lake in a way that does not require a resort membership or a $2 million home.
Part of the lagovista.ai network -- local guides for the north shore of Lake Travis, powered by Backroads Hill Country.