Schertz vs Cibolo: Comparing Two of the Area's MostPopular Communities
If you are shopping for a home northeast of San Antonio, you will run into these two names again and again. Schertz and Cibolo are next-door neighbors; they share the same well-regarded school district, and both put you minutes from Randolph Air Force Base. On paper they look almost interchangeable. In person, they have real personalities, and the right one for you comes down to a handful of practical differences.
Here is the quick take. Schertz is the larger, more established city, with more shopping, more employers, a slightly lower median price, and a wider mix of home ages to choose from. Cibolo is the newer, faster-growing neighbor, with a bigger share of brand-new construction, a slightly higher median, and a quieter feel. Neither one is better. They are simply built for different priorities.
At a glance
Established versus new
This is the heart of the difference. Schertz was incorporated in 1958 and has had decades to grow into itself, which shows up as mature trees, settled neighborhoods, and a downtown that has been there a while.
Cibolo's growth is much more recent, with large stretches of new master-planned communities where the landscaping is still young and the next phase is going up nearby. If you like a place that already feels finished, Schertz has the edge. If you are drawn to the energy of a newer, growing area, Cibolo delivers that.
Shopping, dining, and amenities
This is where Schertz's head start is most obvious. As the more established city, it simply has more in place: a deeper roster of shops and restaurants; the large Schertz Station mixed-use development along I-35; easy access to The Forum shopping center nearby; plus staples like Pickrell Park, the YMCA, the Schertz Public Library, and the regional draw of Bussey's Flea Market.
Schertz is also a genuine employment hub, with an H-E-B distribution operation, an Amazon fulfillment center, and FedEx among local jobs. Cibolo is catching up, with a charming small downtown, a growing dining scene, and a Santikos entertainment center nearby, but for a wider selection, its residents often drive into Schertz or San Antonio.
Home prices and variety
Both cities pull from the same buyer pool, so styles and builders overlap, but the mix differs. Schertz median sale prices have been running in the high $300,000s in early 2026, helped by a deep supply of established homes alongside its new builds, which also means more variety if you want a resale with a mature yard.
Schools
Here the two are mostly on the same team, since both are primarily served by Schertz-Cibolo-Universal City ISD, one of the strongest districts in the area. The difference is at the high-school level. Schertz students often attend Samuel Clemens High School, which offers an International Baccalaureate (IB) program, whileCibolo students generally feed into Byron P.
Steele II High School. One caveat for Schertz: because the citycrosses county lines, a few areas are zoned to Judson ISD or East Central ISD instead, so confirm theassigned schools for any specific address. In Cibolo you are almost always in SCUC, though the exactcampus still varies by neighborhood.
Commute and location
Both sit on the I-35 corridor, and both put you roughly 20 to 25 minutes from downtown San Antonio. Randolph Air Force Base is an easy drive from either, and Schertz in particular anchors the Randolph Metrocom.
The shared downside is traffic, since the ongoing I-35 expansion brings construction and slowdowns along the corridor. Whichever you choose, test your real commute at the time you would actually be making it.
Community feel and events
Both cities lean family-oriented, just with their own flavor. Schertz throws one of the area's biggest parties with its Fourth of July Jubilee, and it even makes real snow for its winter festival. Cibolo counters with events like Cibolofest and a busy seasonal calendar that gives the smaller city a tight-knit feel. You will not feel short on local tradition in either place.
Property taxes and long-term value
Both cities sit in a state with no income tax and, correspondingly, higher property taxes, and in both you will find newer master-planned communities that carry a MUD or PID, which adds to the annual bill. Always compare the full tax rate on a specific home rather than assuming the two cities are identical, because the special-district picture can differ from one neighborhood to the next.
On long-term value, both have benefited from steady demand and population growth along the I-35 corridor, so neither is a risky bet. Schertz offers the stability of a fully established city, while Cibolo's newer inventory and rapid growth give it a different kind of momentum. Either way, buying in a strong, in-demand school district tends to support resale down the road.
The bottom line
Choose Schertz if you want a more established city with more shopping and employers already in place, a wider range of home ages, a slightly lower median price, and the option of Clemens High's IB program
Choose Cibolo if you want a newer home, especially new construction, and a quieter, still-growing community, and you do not mind a short drive for bigger shopping and dining



