USA
Dallas
Texas Sun Belt living — lower cost, strong suburban schools, and no state income tax
Family budget at a glance
The all-in range matches the FAQ answer for "How much does a family typically need per month here?" The other cards are single-line benchmarks — they don't add up to that total (school fees and other costs are separate).
All-in / month (family of 4)
~$5,500–$8,500 / month
3-bed family home
~$2,600 / month
Dinner for 2 (mid-range)
~$65
Nanny
~$18 / hr
Dallas (Dallas-Fort Worth metro) is one of the US's fastest-growing cities — a business and tech hub with strong suburban school districts, no Texas state income tax, and significantly lower housing costs than NYC or Miami. The suburban corridor north of Dallas (Plano, Frisco, Southlake) offers genuinely excellent public schools, large homes, and an affordable lifestyle by US standards. The trade-offs are extreme summer heat (40°C / 104°F+), total dependence on cars, and the same absence of public healthcare that applies across the US.
Action checklist
Concrete steps to make this move happen, in order.
Click any step to jump to that section ↓
- 1Check your visa status — citizens of Visa Waiver Program countries enter the US on an ESTA for up to 90 days; working families need an employer-sponsored H-1B, O-1, L-1, or TN visa before arriving
- 2Decide between Dallas city and northern suburbs (Plano, Frisco, Southlake) before searching — suburb choice determines school district and adds 20–40 min commute
- 3Research school districts before choosing a suburb — Plano ISD, Frisco ISD, and Carroll ISD (Southlake) are consistently among Texas's highest-ranked public school districts
- 4Apply for your Social Security Number (SSN) at a Social Security Administration office in your first week — required for employment, banking, and tax filing
- 5Arrange comprehensive private health insurance before arriving — employer-sponsored plans are standard; medical care in Texas without insurance is extremely expensive
- 6Open a US bank account (Chase, Wells Fargo, or Frost Bank) — required for payroll deposit and rent payments
- 7Get a Texas Driver's License within 90 days — Dallas is entirely car-dependent and a TX license serves as your primary US ID for most purposes
Family fit
Great for
- Tech, finance, telecom, and energy sector professionals whose employers are headquartered in the DFW metro
- Families who want excellent public school districts, large homes, and more space than coastal US cities allow at the same budget
- Parents attracted by no Texas state income tax — a meaningful take-home pay advantage over California or New York
- Families comfortable with a car-dependent suburban lifestyle in exchange for space, affordability, and strong school options
Watch out for
- Dallas is entirely car-dependent — there is virtually no useful public transport; every family needs at least one car, and most need two
- Summer heat is extreme and long — temperatures of 38–42°C (100–108°F) run June through September; children's outdoor time is significantly limited during these months
- Severe weather includes tornado risk in spring (March–May) and occasional ice storms in winter — families need an emergency plan
- The same absence of public healthcare that applies across the US applies here — private insurance is essential and non-negotiable
Climate & seasons
Monthly normals (2001–2020) · MERRA-2 (NASA POWER)
Rainy-day counts are approximate (from monthly rainfall).
- HottestAug · 40.8°Cmean daily high
- CoolestJan · -6.4°Cmean daily low
- WettestMay · 116.2 mmmonth total
- DriestJul · 55.5 mmmonth total
- Low
- -6.4°C
- Rain
- 58 mm
- Wet days
- ~5
- Low
- -4.9°C
- Rain
- 66.1 mm
- Wet days
- ~6
- Low
- -2.2°C
- Rain
- 88 mm
- Wet days
- ~7
- Low
- 3.6°C
- Rain
- 82.5 mm
- Wet days
- ~7
- Low
- 9.3°C
- Rain
- 116.2 mm
- Wet days
- ~10
- Low
- 17.3°C
- Rain
- 96.3 mm
- Wet days
- ~8
- Low
- 20.8°C
- Rain
- 55.5 mm
- Wet days
- ~5
- Low
- 20°C
- Rain
- 62.3 mm
- Wet days
- ~5
- Low
- 13.3°C
- Rain
- 76.8 mm
- Wet days
- ~6
- Low
- 4.5°C
- Rain
- 102 mm
- Wet days
- ~8
- Low
- -1.6°C
- Rain
- 57.3 mm
- Wet days
- ~5
- Low
- -5.6°C
- Rain
- 60.8 mm
- Wet days
- ~5
| Month | Typical high | Typical low | Rain (total) | Rainy days (~) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jan | 23°C | -6.4°C | 58 mm | 5 |
| Feb | 25°C | -4.9°C | 66.1 mm | 6 |
| Mar | 27.6°C | -2.2°C | 88 mm | 7 |
| Apr | 31°C | 3.6°C | 82.5 mm | 7 |
| May | 34.5°C | 9.3°C | 116.2 mm | 10 |
| Jun | 37.6°C | 17.3°C | 96.3 mm | 8 |
| Jul | 40.5°C | 20.8°C | 55.5 mm | 5 |
| Aug | 40.8°C | 20°C | 62.3 mm | 5 |
| Sep | 37.4°C | 13.3°C | 76.8 mm | 6 |
| Oct | 33.6°C | 4.5°C | 102 mm | 8 |
| Nov | 27.7°C | -1.6°C | 57.3 mm | 5 |
| Dec | 23.8°C | -5.6°C | 60.8 mm | 5 |
Family notes
- Warmest month on average: Aug (mean daily high ~41°C); coolest: Jan (mean daily low ~-6°C).
- Most rainfall on average: May (~116 mm total); driest: Jul (~56 mm).
- Mean daily highs reach about 32°C or more in May, Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct — plan air-conditioning, shade, and limited midday outdoor time for babies and young children.
- Peak months can average above 35°C for daily highs — schedule playgrounds, walks, and errands for mornings or evenings when possible.
- Winter nights can dip near freezing (Jan, Feb, Mar, Nov, Dec) — reliable home heating and warm layers for school commutes matter for children.
These values are long-term monthly climatologies from NASA POWER (MERRA-2 reanalysis) for the nearest model grid cell to these coordinates — not a single city-centre weather station. Spatial resolution is about 50 km; coastal belts, hills, and dense urban cores can differ. Precipitation is corrected MERRA-2 rainfall; rainy-day counts are approximated from monthly totals.
Grid cell used: 32.783°, -96.807° (WGS84)
Visa options
Reviewed Apr 2026
Reviewed Apr 2026
US immigration rules are federal — the same in every state and city. Short visits: travellers from VWP (Visa Waiver Program) countries must get ESTA (Electronic System for Travel Authorization — online permission to board a US flight) before travel. After you land, CBP (US Customs and Border Protection) admits you for a limited time — usually up to 90 days per trip under VWP — and records it on your I-94 (official admit-until date at i94.cbp.dhs.gov). B-2 (tourist visa) visitors are often given up to six months per trip on I-94, but the officer decides. None of these allow paid work for a US employer. To live and work long-term, you need an employer-backed petition filed with USCIS (US Citizenship and Immigration Services) and a visa such as H-1B, O-1, or L-1 — or, for many Canadian and Mexican professionals, TN under USMCA. There is no general US remote-work or digital-nomad visa.
Tap the ? next to a term for a quick definition.
ESTA / B-1/B-2 Visitor Visa
ESTA: apply on esta.cbp.dhs.gov before you fly if your country is in the VWP — approval usually lasts two years, but each stay ends on the date CBP puts on your I-94 (often 90 days max per entry). B-2: apply at a US consulate if you are not VWP-eligible; how long you may stay each trip is set at the border on I-94 (often up to six months, not guaranteed). Tourism, family visits, and scouting only — not US payroll work.
Employer-sponsored work visa (H-1B / O-1 / L-1 / TN)
A US employer (or qualifying US entity) files with USCIS for H-1B, O-1, or L-1, or you may qualify for TN at a border or consulate if you are Canadian or Mexican in a listed profession. You start paid work only after your status allows it — there is no broad freelance or remote-nomad visa for the US.
ESTA / B-2 — how long you can stay and what to do first
- Step 1 — Before travel: complete ESTA (VWP nationals) or book a B-2 visa interview — consular wait times vary a lot by country.
- Step 2 — After entry: download your I-94 from i94.cbp.dhs.gov — that admit-until date is your real leave-by deadline for this trip.
- VWP/ESTA: plan for about 90 days per visit unless I-94 shows less — you usually cannot extend VWP from inside the US.
- Paid work for a US employer is not allowed on tourist status; rules on other activities are strict — ask a US immigration attorney if you are unsure.
- Good use for relocation planning: a short trip to view neighbourhoods, schools, and employers — then leave before I-94 expires, or get an appropriate work visa before moving (often applied from outside the US).
- Overstaying past your I-94 date can mean long bars on returning — treat that date as firm.
Work visas — from offer to first paycheck
- H-1B (specialty occupation — typically degree-level jobs): annual cap and often a lottery in March; many new cap hires target an October 1 start — confirm each year with your employer. Processing often takes roughly several months unless premium processing is used where available.
- O-1 (extraordinary ability in certain fields): no H-1B cap; heavy documentation; initial approval often up to three years; timelines often a few months unless expedited.
- L-1A / L-1B (intracompany transfer — executives, managers, or specialized knowledge staff from a foreign branch of the same company): no H-1B lottery; employer files a petition — often roughly 2–4 months processing; one year of prior employment abroad and corporate relationship rules apply.
- TN (USMCA): for Canadian and Mexican citizens in specific professional roles under the treaty — often faster than H-1B for eligible people; duration commonly up to three years per approval; renewals possible — confirm your job title matches the treaty list with an attorney.
- Dependents: spouses and children may receive H-4, O-3, L-2, or TD status — children can usually attend school; whether a spouse may work depends on category and current rules — verify with an attorney.
- Typical order: signed offer → employer and counsel file → USCIS approval → visa stamp abroad if needed, or change of status if eligible → Social Security Number → payroll starts on or after your authorised employment date.
- Changing employers usually requires a new or transferred petition — do not assume you can switch jobs without immigration steps.
Within a few days of every arrival, check i94.cbp.dhs.gov and note your admit-until date — that is when you must leave or change status (your passport visa stamp can show a later expiry). If you need H-1B subject to the annual cap, ask your employer for this year’s registration dates and typical October 1 start — timelines shift each year.
Registration & Social Security Number
Reviewed Apr 2026
Reviewed Apr 2026
- Apply for your SSN at your nearest SSA office — bring your passport, US visa, and I-94 arrival record (downloadable at cbp.gov).
- There is no mandatory address registration system in the US — update your address with your employer, bank, and the SSA as soon as you move in.
- Apply for a Texas Driver's License at your nearest Texas DPS (Department of Public Safety) office within 90 days — required: passport, visa, I-94, SSN, and 2 proofs of Texas address.
- Texas has no state income tax — only federal income tax applies. This is a significant financial advantage over California or New York; engage a US CPA for your first filing.
- Dallas-Fort Worth's large corporate employer base means many companies have established immigration sponsorship programmes — confirm your employer's green card sponsorship intentions early.
Apply for your SSN at a Social Security Administration office (ssa.gov) in your first week — bring passport, I-94, and work visa; takes 2–4 weeks to arrive by post.
Banking
- Chase, Wells Fargo, and Bank of America are the main banks used by expat families in the DFW metro — all have extensive branch networks across the northern suburbs.
- Frost Bank is a Texas-headquartered bank with strong customer service and good experience serving corporate relocations — a solid local alternative.
- You need your passport, US visa, I-94, and a Texas address to open an account — SSN is helpful but most major banks can open an account before it arrives.
- Wise and Revolut work immediately from arrival for international transfers — widely used by the DFW expat community.
- Most Dallas-area landlords require rent via ACH transfer, personal check, or Zelle — a US bank account is essential within the first week.
Chase and Wells Fargo open accounts with passport and visa — go in your first week; most Dallas landlords and property managers require ACH transfer or personal check.
Housing
Dallas-Fort Worth is significantly more affordable than coastal US cities. The northern suburbs (Plano, Frisco, Southlake, Allen) are the top family destinations — excellent public schools, larger homes, and strong community infrastructure. Dallas proper (Highland Park, Preston Hollow) offers a more urban feel at higher cost.
Where to search
These are the main US rental platforms — this is where residents rent, not Airbnb.
Search by suburb name inside each platform to filter local DFW listings.
Tip: DFW is spread across a very large metro area — decide on your target suburb before searching; neighbourhood choice has a major impact on school district and commute.
Typical monthly rents
- 1-bed apartment, Uptown Dallas or Plano: $1,800–$2,600/month
- 3-bed house, Plano or Frisco (northern suburbs, top school districts): $2,500–$3,800/month
- 3-bed house, Southlake or Colleyville (premium suburbs): $3,200–$5,000/month
- 3-bed house, Dallas proper (Highland Park / Preston Hollow): $3,000–$5,500/month
Best areas for families
What you need to rent
- Valid passport and US visa
- Employment verification letter with salary confirmation
- 3 months of bank statements and last 3 payslips (or offer letter if newly arrived)
- Most DFW landlords require income of 3 times the monthly rent minimum
- 1–2 months security deposit
- US bank account for ACH transfer or personal check
Schools
Dallas-Fort Worth's major strength for families is its suburban public school districts. Plano ISD, Frisco ISD, and Carroll ISD (Southlake) are consistently among the highest-ranked school districts in Texas. International and private schools are available but the public school option here is genuinely strong.
Public system
Texas public schools are free and open to all residents regardless of immigration status. Quality varies enormously by school district — the northern suburbs (Plano, Frisco, Southlake) have some of Texas's highest-rated public schools. All instruction is in English; ESL support is available. Enrol via your local school district website after establishing a Texas address.
International options
Dallas has a smaller international school sector than NYC or Miami. Private and independent schools exist in Highland Park and North Dallas. Fees range from $18,000 to $35,000/year. For most international families, the high-quality public school districts in the northern suburbs are the preferred and most practical choice.
Language notes
English is the language of instruction in all public schools. ESL support is widely available. Spanish is widely spoken across the DFW metro and is a practical second language for children. Private tutoring costs roughly $60–$100/hr in the DFW area.
Choose your suburb based on school district first — Plano ISD and Frisco ISD are among Texas's best public school systems and the primary reason families choose the northern suburbs.
Education options
Texas public school districts — top-rated suburbs
Plano ISD, Frisco ISD, and Carroll ISD (Southlake) are consistently among Texas's highest-rated public school systems. Free for all residents.
American independent / private schools
Private and independent schools available in Highland Park and North Dallas. Selective admissions. Apply 6–12 months ahead.
International / IB curriculum schools
Small but growing international school sector in the DFW metro. Serves diplomatic and multinational corporate families.
Childcare
DFW has a large licensed daycare sector and an affordable nanny market compared to coastal US cities. Texas offers a Pre-K programme for qualifying 4-year-olds, and private Pre-K is widely available.
Daycare & nurseries
- Texas Pre-K — free half-day public pre-K for qualifying 4-year-olds (income-based, English learners, and other eligibility criteria); enrol via your local school district
- Licensed private daycare centres — fees typically $1,200–$2,000/month in the northern suburbs for ages 6 weeks to 4 years; shorter waitlists than coastal US cities
- Bilingual (Spanish/English) daycare options are available across the DFW metro given the large Spanish-speaking community
- Check Texas DFPS (Department of Family and Protective Services) licensing status for any daycare centre before enrolling
Nanny & au pair
- Full-time nanny in Dallas/DFW suburbs: typically $2,000–$3,200/month (roughly $13–$20/hr) — significantly more affordable than NYC or Miami
- Part-time nanny / babysitter: roughly $15–$22/hr
- Nanny taxes are legally required — as employer, you must pay Social Security, Medicare, and state unemployment taxes; use a nanny payroll service to stay compliant
- Start searching 6–8 weeks before arriving — the DFW nanny market is more relaxed than coastal US cities
Where to find childcare
- Care.com — the largest US childcare platform with a strong DFW section for nannies and daycare
- UrbanSitter — used in Dallas for nannies and after-school sitters
- Search 'Dallas Fort Worth Expats' on Google — community recommendations from parents in your suburb are the most reliable source for trustworthy nannies
Healthcare
Reviewed Apr 2026
Reviewed Apr 2026
- The US has no universal public healthcare — private insurance is required. Most working families receive employer-sponsored health insurance as part of their DFW corporate compensation package.
- Employer-sponsored family health insurance in the DFW metro typically costs $0–$600/month in employee contributions depending on the plan.
- Major hospitals: UT Southwestern Medical Center (world-class academic medical centre), Children's Health (dedicated children's hospital), and Baylor Scott and White Health — all provide comprehensive family and paediatric care.
- Budget for deductibles and co-pays even with insurance — family deductibles of $1,000–$5,000/year are standard on most US employer plans.
- International private medical insurance (IPMI) is an alternative for families not covered by a US employer plan — provides global health coverage including the US.
Confirm your employer's health plan covers your full family from your first day of work — enrolment windows are strict in the US.
Safety
- The northern suburbs (Plano, Frisco, Southlake, Allen) are among the safest communities in Texas — very low violent crime rates for day-to-day family life
- Dallas city proper varies significantly by neighbourhood — Highland Park and Preston Hollow are safe; some south and west Dallas areas have higher crime rates
- Summer heat is extreme (38–42°C / 100–108°F) from June through September — outdoor activities for children should be planned for early morning or late evening
- Tornado risk in spring (March–May) is real in North Texas — know your shelter options and monitor weather alerts during severe weather season
- Traffic accidents on DFW's highway network are the #1 daily risk — speeds are high and driving standards vary; maintain focus and defensive driving habits
FAQ
Is Dallas good for families?
Yes — especially in northern suburbs with top-rated public schools, large homes, and no Texas state income tax. Trade-offs are brutal summer heat, sprawl, and total car dependence.
How much does a family typically need per month here?
Budget roughly $5,500–$8,500/month all-in for a family of four in many suburban setups — lower than coastal US cities but not "cheap" once you add two cars, cooling, and activities. Private school pushes the range up.
Is housing hard to find here?
Active but generally less insane than NYC or the Bay Area — good inventory in Plano, Frisco, and Southlake for family homes. Still move quickly on desirable listings; the best school zones attract competition.
Do children need private school here, or can public schools work?
A major draw is strong public districts — many expat families rely on Plano, Frisco, or Carroll ISD rather than private fees. Private options exist but are less central to the story than in Miami or NYC.
Is healthcare easy to access as a newcomer?
Major hospital systems (UT Southwestern affiliates and others) offer broad networks — access is insurance-driven like the rest of the US. Lock employer coverage before arrival where possible.
Do you need a car in Dallas?
Yes — essentially always for suburban family life. Public transport does not replace school runs, grocery trips, or typical commutes. Plan parking and commute time into your housing search.
How difficult is the paperwork and bureaucracy after moving?
Standard US relocation load — Texas driver's licence, vehicle registration, school registration, and utilities. Employer immigration teams often handle the heavy lifting for visa holders.
What usually surprises families after arrival?
How far distances feel — "20 minutes away" can be a different county. And how severe hail and storms are for roofs and cars — check insurance deductibles and garage space.
Sources
Official government, institutional, and public sources.
Community
Expat groups and community forums. Use the search buttons below to find them.
Search 'Dallas Fort Worth Expats' on Google — active English-speaking expat community for families in the DFW metro
Search: “Dallas Fort Worth Expats Facebook group”Search on GoogleSearch 'Relocating to Dallas Texas' on Google — practical community for families in the relocation process
Search: “Relocating to Dallas Texas Facebook group”Search on Google