Travis County is a county in south central Texas. The population was 1,290,188 at the 2020 census.[1] It is the fifth-most populous county in Texas. Its county seat is Austin.[2] Austin is also known as the capital of Texas.
The county was established in 1840. It is named for William Barret Travis. Travis was the commander of the Republic of Texas at the Battle of the Alamo.
Travis County is part of the Austin-Round Rock Metropolitan Statistical Area. It is located along the Balcones Fault. The physical boundaries of Austin are the Edwards Plateau to the west and the Blackland Prairie to the east.
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| Central city | |
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| Satellite cities | |
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Other communities | |
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| Counties | |
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Parks and preserves |
- Balcones Canyonlands
- Bastrop
- Emma Long
- Enchanted Rock
- Hippie Hollow
- Indiangrass
- Longhorn Cavern
- McKinney Falls
- Mount Bonnell
- Onion Creek
- Pedernales Falls
- John Stokes
- Wild Basin
- Zilker
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| Geography |
- Austin Chalk
- Balcones Fault
- Edwards Aquifer
- Edwards Plateau
- Highland Lakes
- Hill Country
- Llano Uplift
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Bodies of water |
- Barton Creek
- Barton Springs
- Colorado River
- Granger Lake
- Lady Bird Lake
- Lake Austin
- Lake Georgetown
- Lake Marble Falls
- Lake Travis
- Lake Walter E. Long
- Pedernales River
- San Gabriel River
- San Marcos River
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| Transportation |
- Capital Area Rural Transportation System
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| Cities | | |
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| Villages | |
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| CDPs |
- Barton Creek
- Garfield
- Hornsby Bend
- Hudson Bend
- Jollyville‡
- Lost Creek
- Manchaca
- Shady Hollow
- Wells Branch
- Windemere
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Other unincorporated communities |
- Bluff Springs
- Cele
- Del Valle
- Elroy
- Kimbro
- Littig
- Lund
- Maha
- Manda
- Marshall Ford
- McNeil
- Nameless
- New Sweden
- Pilot Knob
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| Footnotes | ‡This populated place also has portions in an adjacent county or counties |
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