Your Guide to
East Texas
City guides, things to do, where to eat, lakes and trails, cost of living, and everything else you need to know about this part of Texas.
City Guides
Explore East Texas Cities
From Tyler to Nacogdoches, find out what makes each city unique.
Tyler
Smith County
East Texas runs through Tyler first
Jacksonville
Cherokee County
College town roots, East Texas heart
Athens
Henderson County
Small town roots, big lake living
Henderson
Rusk County
County seat with oil roots and staying power
Kilgore
Rusk County
Oil derricks and diplomas since 1930
Whitehouse
Smith County
Tyler's quieter, smarter next-door neighbor
Gladewater
Upshur County
Oil built it. Antiques keep it interesting.
Gun Barrel City
Henderson County
Lake life with a loaded name
Regional Guides
East Texas Guides
In-depth guides to everything East Texas has to offer.
Things to Do in East Texas
East Texas doesn't have a big flashy skyline or a theme park with a mascot. What it does have is a ridiculous amount of natural beauty, small-town festivals that actually feel like festivals, and enough lakes and trails to keep you busy for years. If you know where to look — and you're about to — this region delivers.
Read Guide →Best Lakes in East Texas
If you've ever sat in a lawn chair at a bait shop on Highway 198 and watched somebody haul a 10-pound bass out of a cooler, you already know East Texas lakes hit different. This part of the state has more quality freshwater than most people realize — and each lake has its own personality. Here's where to go and what to expect when you get there.
Read Guide →Moving to East Texas: What You Need to Know
Most people hear "East Texas" and picture flat, dry rangeland stretching to the horizon. They're thinking of West Texas. East Texas is pine forests, rolling hills, and lakes you can actually swim in without driving three hours. If you're considering a move here, the reality is going to surprise you — mostly in good ways.
Read Guide →East Texas Real Estate Guide
East Texas is one of the last affordable metro-adjacent regions in the state, and honestly, that window is narrowing. If you've been watching the housing market here and waiting for prices to drop back to 2019 levels, that's probably not happening. But compared to DFW or Austin, you can still get a whole lot of house for your money — especially if you know which towns to look at.
Read Guide →Best Restaurants in East Texas
You can smell the smoke from the highway in half these towns. East Texas runs on pit-smoked brisket, chicken fried steak the size of your plate, and Tex-Mex that nobody's trying to make fancy. The best meals here come from places with hand-painted signs and parking lots full of trucks at noon.
Read Guide →Best Hiking Trails in East Texas
East Texas has more trail miles than most Texans realize — they're just hidden under a canopy of loblolly pines instead of sitting next to a highway billboard. From rolling hills near Tyler to deep forest paths in the Davy Crockett National Forest, this region delivers real hiking without the six-hour drive to Big Bend. Here's a trail-by-trail breakdown so you can pick the right one and actually enjoy it.
Read Guide →East Texas Festivals and Annual Events
If you've ever driven through Canton on a Trade Days weekend without knowing it was happening, you understand the traffic on Highway 19 in a way most people don't. East Texas runs on a festival calendar that starts in early spring and doesn't really quit until the holidays. Most of these events have been around for decades, and the towns that host them take them seriously.
Read Guide →Fishing in East Texas: Complete Guide
Most people show up to East Texas expecting one good bass lake and a bunch of stock ponds. What they actually find is a region packed with world-class fisheries, sleeper crappie holes, and catfish waters that don't get half the attention they deserve. This is the guide you'd get if you asked a neighbor who's fished every one of them.
Read Guide →Cost of Living in East Texas
Folks in Tyler still talk about the house on Donnybrook that sold for what a one-bedroom apartment costs in Austin. That's not an exaggeration — it's just Tuesday in East Texas. If you're looking at the numbers from a metro area, you're going to need to recalibrate your expectations. Down here, your money works differently.
Read Guide →Schools in East Texas: A Parent's Guide
Your kid's school district will shape your commute, your property taxes, your Friday nights, and roughly a thousand dinner-table arguments. East Texas has a surprising range of options packed into a pretty tight stretch of Smith County — and the differences between them matter more than most folks realize.
Read Guide →Best Day Trips from Tyler and East Texas
People expect East Texas to be flat, brown, and boring between cities. Then they take a back road to Jefferson or a two-lane through the Piney Woods and realize they've been wrong about this part of the state for years. Some of the best day trips in Texas start right here — no six-hour highway grind required.
Read Guide →East Texas BBQ: The Best Smokehouses and Pits
Texas has more BBQ joints per capita than any other state. But East Texas does it differently than the rest — more sauce, more sides, more pork on the menu. This is a guide to the smokehouses and pits worth your time between Tyler, Jacksonville, and Kilgore.
Read Guide →East Texas State Parks Guide
Most folks picture West Texas when they think of state parks — big desert vistas and dry canyon walls. But the East Texas parks? Totally different world. We're talking towering pines, spring-fed lakes, swampy bottomlands full of birdsong, and campgrounds where the fireflies put on a show every summer night.
Read Guide →Living in Tyler, Texas: Complete Guide
Smith County added over 10,000 residents between the 2010 and 2020 census counts, and a good chunk of them landed in Tyler. That's not some accident — people keep picking this city because the math works. Good hospitals, affordable housing, actual restaurants, and a commute that doesn't make you question your life choices. But Tyler's got quirks, too, and you should know about those before you sign a lease or make an offer.
Read Guide →Hunting in East Texas: Seasons, Land, and Tips
Where do you even start? East Texas has white-tailed deer thick in the bottomlands, mourning dove pouring into cut fields every September, and feral hogs that'll tear up your food plot overnight. This is your no-nonsense guide to seasons, finding land, and actually putting yourself in a position to fill a tag.
Read Guide →A Brief History of East Texas
Ever driven through the Piney Woods and wondered who was here before all the chicken houses and pine plantations? East Texas has a deeper history than most folks realize — one that stretches back thousands of years and left fingerprints on every town you pass through today.
Read Guide →East Texas Farmers Markets and Local Produce
Where do you actually find good tomatoes around here? Not the pale, sad ones from the grocery store — the real ones, still warm from the vine, the kind that smell like summer before you even bite into them. East Texas has more farmers markets, u-pick farms, and roadside stands than most folks realize, and the trick is just knowing when and where to show up.
Read Guide →Retiring in East Texas: Why Retirees Love It Here
Most folks assume East Texas is just piney woods and not much else — that you'd have to move to Austin or the Hill Country to find a decent retirement. They're wrong. From lakeside living near Gun Barrel City to walkable downtowns in Mineola, retirees are quietly building some of the best years of their lives right here between the Sabine and the Trinity.
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