Median household income across Kendall County’s six census tracts with reported data runs from $79,111 at the low end to $175,577 at the top, a spread of roughly $96,000 between the county’s lowest and highest figures.

Tract 9704.03 posts the highest median at $175,577. Tracts 9704.06 and 9704.04 sit close together in the upper range — $148,232 and $147,000, respectively — forming a cluster of high-income geographies in the county’s tract 9704 family. Tract 9703.02 comes in at $119,695. The remaining two reporting tracts fall below six figures: Tract 9701.02 at $91,786 and Tract 9704.05 at $79,111.

The numbers are consistent with what anyone who has priced a home in the county already knows. The master-planned subdivisions and horse-country corridors that pushed Boerne’s growth over the past decade carry high price floors, and those concentrations show up in the upper cluster of tracts. The lower-income tracts are not negligible — $79,111 and $91,786 are above many Texas county medians — but they sit at a substantial distance from the six-figure band above them.

The gap matters locally because it reflects a housing market that has moved faster than wages in service and trade jobs. A household earning $79,000 and a household earning $175,000 are navigating the same Boerne real estate market at roughly the same moment.

These are 2020–2024 ACS 5-year estimates. Each tract carries a margin of error; the ladder above marks each ±MOE. 3 tracts were suppressed because their estimates were unreliable or unavailable.