Indian Community • Dallas-Fort Worth
Hindi-Speaking Community in Dallas-Fort Worth
38,850+ Hindi speakers • #2 Indian language in DFW • Allen/Plano East: Hindi-dominant corridor • 8-10+ Holi events annually
DFW’s Hindi-speaking community is nearly 39,000 strong — the second-largest Indian language group in the metroplex, just behind Telugu. But unlike Telugu families who cluster in a tight Irving-to-Frisco corridor, Hindi-belt families from Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Delhi, Jharkhand, Uttarakhand, and Haryana are everywhere. They are the connective tissue of Indian DFW — the language spoken at Patel Brothers checkout lines, FunAsia movie lobbies, and India Bazaar parking lots regardless of who else is shopping. Every November, BiJUSA organizes what they call the largest Chhath Puja in North America on the shores of Lewisville Lake. Every spring, DFW hosts more Holi celebrations than any metro outside of India. And in Allen, the Radha Krishna Temple conducts its services primarily in Hindi.
Last updated: March 2026 • Full Indian Community guide for Dallas-Fort Worth →
Why Hindi-Speaking Families Choose DFW
The Hindi-speaking community in DFW is not one community — it is a dozen. Families from Uttar Pradesh (the single largest source state), Bihar, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Delhi, Jharkhand, Uttarakhand, and Haryana all speak Hindi as their primary language, but each brings distinct food, festivals, and social networks. A Bihari family celebrating Chhath Puja at Lewisville Lake has little cultural overlap with a Rajasthani family serving dal baati churma at a RANT picnic — except that both switch to Hindi when they meet.
DFW’s Indian American population has more than doubled since 2010, from roughly 107,000 to over 235,000. Hindi-belt families rode the same wave that brought Telugu professionals — tech jobs at Texas Instruments, Infosys, TCS, Capital One, and Toyota in Plano, plus the obvious draws of no state income tax and affordable housing compared to the Bay Area or New Jersey. But where Telugu families created a visible corridor (Irving → Coppell → Frisco → Celina), Hindi speakers dispersed across the entire metro, integrating into every Indian neighborhood without dominating any single one.
The result is a community that is massive in aggregate but modest in any single suburb. This can make Hindi-belt families feel invisible next to the highly organized Telugu or Gujarati communities. But the infrastructure is here: BiJUSA (Bihar Jharkhand & Uttar Pradesh Society of America) has 2,500+ members. FunAsia broadcasts Bollywood on 104.9 FM to 800,000 listeners. India Bazaar operates 12+ stores across the metroplex. And the Radha Krishna Temple in Allen — the most Hindi-centric temple in DFW — runs week-long Holi celebrations with Braj-style Phoolon Ki Holi.
Where Hindi Speakers Live: Census Data
Census PUMA data reveals a community that is everywhere but rarely dominant. Unlike Telugu speakers who concentrate along a tight corridor, Hindi speakers are spread broadly across the metro. The one clear exception is the Allen/Murphy/Plano East belt, where Hindi outnumbers Telugu by 3 to 1 — the most Hindi-dominant area in all of DFW.
Irving North / Coppell / Carrollton SW — 7,045 Hindi Speakers (ACS 2022)
The single largest concentration of Hindi speakers in DFW — but Telugu leads here at 9,795. This PUMA has 25,515 India-born residents, the highest of any DFW area, making it the undisputed capital of Indian DFW. Tamil (4,679) is also massive. Hindi speakers here benefit from extraordinary infrastructure: two Patel Brothers locations in Irving, the DFW Hindu Temple / Ekta Mandir with its Vidya Vikas Hindi school, BAPS Swaminarayan Mandir, and the historic Irving “Little India” corridor along MacArthur Blvd and Belt Line Rd with chaat houses, sari shops, and grocery stores.
Plano West — 5,326 Hindi Speakers (ACS 2022)
Hindi slightly leads Telugu (4,499) here — one of the few DFW areas where this is true. Plano West has 18,294 India-born residents and is the most linguistically balanced Indian area in Collin County, with strong Tamil (4,102) and substantial Gujarati and Urdu populations. India Bazaar West Plano anchors the grocery scene. Plano West Senior High School and Jasper High School serve the area with strong academics. Median home price: ~$550K.
Allen / Murphy / Plano East — 3,147 Hindi Speakers (ACS 2022)
This is Hindi-belt territory. Hindi (3,147) outnumbers Telugu (959) by more than 3 to 1 — the widest gap in any major DFW PUMA. With 8,482 India-born residents, this area has a distinctly North Indian character. The Radha Krishna Temple (JKYog) sits right here in Allen, conducting services primarily in Hindi. Allen ISD is highly rated, and the area offers newer construction at median prices around $450-550K. This is where Hindi-belt families are most likely to find neighbors from UP, Bihar, and Rajasthan.
Frisco East — 3,011 Hindi Speakers (ACS 2022)
Hindi is strong in Frisco but Telugu dominates at 5,307. This PUMA has 13,029 India-born residents. Telugu surpassed Spanish as the #2 language in Frisco ISD in 2025, but Hindi is a substantial third. Karya Siddhi Hanuman Temple is here, offering Hindi language classes alongside Telugu and other languages. Patel Brothers Frisco (Preston Rd) and India Bazaar Frisco serve the grocery needs. Frisco ISD is one of the top-rated districts in Texas. Median home: ~$500-600K.
Celina / Prosper — 2,804 Hindi Speakers (ACS 2022)
The newest growth frontier. Telugu leads at 3,460, but Hindi (2,804) is strong. With 8,395 India-born residents in this rapidly developing area, Prosper ISD and Celina ISD are attracting young Indian families priced out of Frisco. A new India Bazaar location is planned for the Prosper/North Frisco area at Hollyhock & US-380. Median home: ~$500-600K in newer developments.
Other Notable Areas
- Irving Central / Dallas NW — 2,415 Hindi speakers (ACS 2022), 7,736 India-born. The Las Colinas tech corridor draws professionals. More affordable than Collin County suburbs.
- Frisco West / The Colony / Little Elm — 2,181 Hindi speakers (ACS 2022). Telugu dominant (4,749). Near BiJUSA’s Chhath Puja venues at Lewisville Lake.
- Plano South / Richardson North — 1,718 Hindi speakers (ACS 2022). Near FunAsia complex. Transition area between established and newer Indian DFW.
- McKinney — 1,699 Hindi speakers (ACS 2022), growing rapidly. India Bazaar McKinney serves the area.
- Plano Central — 1,497 Hindi speakers (ACS 2022) vs just 196 Telugu. Hindi is 7.6x Telugu here — a quietly Hindi-dominant pocket.
- Flower Mound / Highland Village — 1,513 Hindi speakers (ACS 2022). Family-oriented suburbs in Denton County with excellent Lewisville ISD schools.
- Carrollton North / Dallas North (Denton County) — 1,195 Hindi speakers (ACS 2022). India Bazaar Carrollton nearby.
- Grapevine / Southlake / Colleyville — 1,148 Hindi speakers (ACS 2022). Affluent area with Carroll ISD (top-rated). Kathak Rhythms has a Southlake location.
- Fort Worth North — 971 Hindi speakers (ACS 2022) vs 119 Telugu. Hindi dominates Tarrant County’s Indian community — Fort Worth’s Indian population skews heavily North Indian.
Organizations & Community Life
Hindi-speaking communities in DFW organize primarily by state of origin rather than by language. This is a key difference from Telugu or Tamil communities, which have strong linguistic-identity organizations (TANTEX, NATA, TPAD). Hindi-belt families find their people through state-based groups and pan-Indian umbrella organizations.
BiJUSA — Bihar Jharkhand & Uttar Pradesh Society of America
The centerpiece Hindi-belt organization in DFW. Founded around 2019 as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, BiJUSA has grown to 2,500+ community members and 200+ active volunteers. Co-founded by Nanda Tiwari, Sonit Singh, Anikanchan Raut, and Animesh Kumar, it covers families from Bihar, Jharkhand, AND Uttar Pradesh — the three states that form the core of Hindi-belt identity.
BiJUSA’s signature events define Hindi-belt cultural life in DFW: the Chhath Mahaparv (described as the largest Chhath Puja in North America), the annual Litti Chokha Mela (a Bihari food festival now in its third year, serving litti chokha and Champaran meat), summer picnics, and cricket tournaments. It is entirely volunteer-run. bijusa.org
State Associations
- Rajasthan Association of North Texas (RANT) — Based in Plano. Brings Rajasthani families together for cultural events and charitable causes. rantusa.yolasite.com
- Madhya Pradesh Association of Dallas (MPAD) — Founded 2022. Newer and smaller, but actively organizing Holi celebrations and community events. mpad.foundation
Dedicated associations for Delhi, Haryana, and Uttarakhand families do not currently exist in DFW. These communities participate through umbrella organizations and BiJUSA.
Umbrella Organizations
- India Association of North Texas (IANT) — Established 1962, incorporated 1976. The oldest and largest Indian umbrella organization in DFW. FIA-approved. Organizes Republic Day, Independence Day, and Diwali celebrations that serve all Hindi-speaking families. iant.com
- DFW Indian Cultural Society (DFW ICS) — Organized the first Diwali Mela in 2006 at Texas Stadium, drawing 38,000+ attendees.
- US India Chamber of Commerce DFW — Business and professional networking across the Indian community.
Temples & Spiritual Life
DFW has an extraordinary Hindu temple landscape. For Hindi-speaking families, temples with Rama, Hanuman, Krishna, and Durga worship — and Hindi-language pujas — are the primary spiritual anchors.
Radha Krishna Temple of Dallas (Allen)
1450 N Watters Rd, Allen, TX 75013 • (469) 795-9130
The most Hindi-centric temple in DFW. Established by Swami Mukundananda (JKYog — Jagadguru Kripaluji Yog), consecrated July 4-11, 2017. Hindi is the primary language of discourse — Swami Mukundananda teaches in Hindi, and services are conducted in Hindi and Sanskrit. Located in the heart of the Allen/Plano East Hindi-dominant corridor. Major celebrations include Ram Navami, Janmashtami, Radhashtami, Diwali, and a week-long Holi celebration with Holika Dahan and Braj-style Phoolon Ki Holi. Also offers Kathak dance classes taught by Smt. Rinku Bhattacharya Das. NOT affiliated with ISKCON.
DFW Hindu Temple / Ekta Mandir (Irving)
1605 N Britain Rd, Irving, TX 75061
A multi-denomination Hindu temple serving Irving, Coppell, Carrollton, and surrounding areas. High Hindi-belt relevance: hosts Arya Samaj Havan (4th Friday of each month, 7-8:30pm), Holi celebrations, Navratri, and the Vidya Vikas School — a Sunday Hindi school (9am-2:15pm) teaching Hindi to children from preschool through high school. This is DFW’s primary weekend Hindi education program.
ISKCON Radha Kalachandji Temple (Dallas)
5430 Gurley Ave, Dallas, TX 75223 • (214) 821-1048
Established 1971 — one of the oldest ISKCON temples in America. Krishna worship with Hindi bhajans and kirtans. Home to Kalachandji’s, Dallas’s longest-serving vegetarian restaurant (30+ years), offering North Indian vegetarian food in a temple garden setting. Open Tue-Sun for lunch and dinner.
Other Temples
- BAPS Shri Swaminarayan Mandir — 4601 N State Hwy 161, Irving, TX 75038. Traditional stone-and-marble architecture. Gujarati-founded (Swaminarayan tradition) but Hindi is widely understood and many North Indian families attend. Daily darshan 7am-7:30pm.
- Karya Siddhi Hanuman Temple — 12030 Independence Pkwy, Frisco, TX 75035. A 34,000 sq ft, $11M+ pan-Indian temple founded by HH Sri Ganapathy Sachchidananda Swamiji. Main deity is Hanuman — and the Hanuman Chalisa, recited daily, is in Hindi/Awadhi. Set a world record in 2015 for longest continuous Hanuman Chalisa chanting (24+ hours). Offers Hindi language classes alongside Telugu, Tamil, Kannada, and others. dallashanuman.org
- Greater Dallas Arya Samaj — PO Box 514, Allen, TX 75013. Monthly havan at DFW Hindu Temple (Irving), 4th Friday 7-8:30pm. Arya Samaj is deeply rooted in Hindi-belt tradition, emphasizing Vedic rituals and Hindi/Sanskrit discourse. aryasamajdallas.org
- Chinmaya Mission DFW — Three locations: Chinmaya Saaket (17701 Davenport Rd, Dallas), Chinmaya Chitrakoot (900 N Belt Line Rd, Irving), and Frisco (12615 Jereme Trail). Bala Vihar children’s classes and Vedanta study groups. cmdfw.org
Festivals: Chhath Puja, Holi & Diwali
Chhath Puja — The Hindi-Belt Signature
If one festival defines the Hindi-belt community and separates it from every other Indian sub-community, it is Chhath Puja. This ancient Vedic festival — dedicated to the Sun God Surya and Chhathi Maiya — is celebrated primarily by families from Bihar, Jharkhand, and eastern Uttar Pradesh. It involves standing in water at dawn and dusk to offer arghya (prayers) to the rising and setting sun, with elaborate preparations of thekua (wheat-jaggery cookies) and fruit offerings.
BiJUSA organizes DFW’s Chhath Mahaparv — which they describe as the largest Chhath Puja in North America — near Lewisville Lake. Recent venues include Little Elm Beach (2024) and The Colony (2025). They rotate lakeside locations each year to find appropriate water access for the sunrise and sunset rituals. The four-day festival (typically November, six days after Diwali) draws families from across North Texas. If you see families standing at a lake shore offering prayers to the sun on a November morning in DFW, you’ve found the Hindi-belt community.
Holi — DFW’s Biggest Hindi-Belt Cultural Export
DFW has an extraordinary density of Holi events — 8-10+ major celebrations across the metro every spring. This is arguably the most visible Hindi-belt cultural contribution to DFW, having crossed beyond the Indian community into mainstream culture, with cities like Bedford, Flower Mound, and Grapevine hosting their own public celebrations.
- Rangotsav (FunAsia) — Billed as the largest Holi in North Texas. Annual mega-event with major Bollywood headliners (Hrithik Roshan in 2025). Held at DEW Event Center, Lewisville.
- Radha Krishna Temple Holi (Allen) — Week-long devotional celebration with Holika Dahan, Braj-style Phoolon Ki Holi (flower Holi), kirtan, and festive feasts. The most spiritually authentic Holi in DFW.
- DFW Hindu Temple Holi (Irving) — Free entry, food booths, DJ and dhol music, colors for sale.
- Dallas Festival of Colors / Holi Mela — Running 15+ years at Southfork Ranch, Parker. Free color throws, dance performances, games. ~$12 admission.
- RANG DE (Coppell) — Outdoor celebration at The Sound at Cypress Waters with color fights, Indian cuisine, DJs.
- Flower Mound Holi Festival & Color Run — Heritage Park. Free, family-friendly with kids parade, traditional food, dance performances.
- Bedford’s Festival of Color — Generations Park. Free; live Indian dance, DJ, food trucks, henna.
- MPAD Holi — Organized by the Madhya Pradesh Association for the MP community and friends.
Diwali & Other Festivals
Diwali is the biggest pan-Indian celebration, but the Hindi-belt version has its own flavors: Lakshmi Puja on the main night, Govardhan Puja and Bhai Dooj in the days after. IANT and DFW ICS organize the major metro-wide Diwali events. Navratri brings nine nights of Durga worship and garba/dandiya at temples and community halls — while garba is Gujarati in origin, Hindi-belt families participate heavily, especially those from Rajasthan and UP. Ram Navami at the Radha Krishna Temple in Allen draws large Hindi-speaking crowds.
Hindi-Belt Food & Restaurants
Hindi-belt cuisine is what most Americans think of as “Indian food” — butter chicken, dal makhani, tandoori naan, biryani, samosa, chaat. But within the community, the regional distinctions matter. Lucknowi/Awadhi food (kebabs, nihari, biryani) is different from Bihari (litti chokha, sattu paratha) which is different from Rajasthani (dal baati churma, ker sangri). Here is where to find it in DFW.
Chaat & Street Food
- India Chaat Cafe — 18101 Preston Rd, Ste 200, Dallas 75252. North Indian chaat, tandoori wraps in naan, kebabs, biryani. Chef Jinder Singh brings 14+ years of Dallas kitchen experience.
- Bombay Chowpatty — 825 W Royal Ln, Irving. Mumbai-style street food and chaat, pav bhaji. Named after Mumbai’s famous Chowpatty Beach.
- Taj Chaat House — 1057 W Rochelle Rd, Irving 75062. Indian vegetarian fast food, chaat, dosas. Daily 11am-9pm. (Note: Plano location is closed.)
- India 101 — 3311 Regent Blvd #101, Irving 75063. A 101-item buffet with live chaat station, tandoor grill, and dessert bar. North and South Indian plus Indo-Chinese.
North Indian & Fine Dining
- India Palace — 12817 Preston Rd #105, Dallas 75230. One of the first Indian restaurants in Dallas (relocated to Preston Valley Shopping Center in 1985). “Best Indian Restaurant” by Dallas Observer for 12+ consecutive years; also recognized by D Magazine, Dallas Morning News, and Zagat. Traditional North Indian cuisine.
- Jashan Indian Fine Dining — 7401 Lone Star Dr, B120, Plano (Legacy North). An upscale 8,200 sq ft restaurant with a 14-course tasting menu featuring Awadhi, Hyderabadi, and Nizam-era recipes. Dum cooking and tandoor specialties. Chef Ashish Bhasin (prominent regional cuisine specialist from India). The closest thing to a standalone Lucknowi/Awadhi dining experience in DFW.
- Kalachandji’s — 5430 Gurley Ave, Dallas 75223 (at ISKCON temple). Dallas’s longest-serving vegetarian restaurant (30+ years). North Indian vegetarian food in a serene temple garden setting.
Bihari & Rajasthani Food
There is no standalone Bihari or Rajasthani restaurant in DFW — this is a gap that home cooks and community events fill. BiJUSA’s annual Litti Chokha Mela (now in its third year) is the primary way to get authentic Bihari food — litti chokha, Champaran meat (ahuna mutton), and other Bihar specialties served community-style. For Rajasthani food, RANT events occasionally feature dal baati churma. Taste of Rajwada (Fort Worth/Irving area) specializes in Rajasthani cuisine — check their social media (@tasteofrajwada) for current availability.
Indian Grocery Stores
- India Bazaar — 12+ locations across DFW including McKinney, Fort Worth, Little Elm, Plano (Super Center), Irving (2), Lewisville, Richardson, Frisco, West Plano, Carrollton, and more. A new location is planned for Prosper/North Frisco. One of the largest Indian grocery chains in Texas. indiabazaardfw.com
- Patel Brothers — 3 DFW locations: Irving (1009 W Rochelle Rd), Irving (8150 Walton Blvd, MacArthur Marketplace), and Frisco (2787 Preston Rd, Ste 1150). The national chain’s DFW footprint.
- Apna Bazaar (Carrollton) and Mayuri Indian Grocery (Irving) round out the options.
What to look for: The Hindi-belt food markers are chaat (especially pani puri and aloo tikki), tandoori items, biryani (Lucknowi style — lighter than Hyderabadi), litti chokha (Bihari — rare outside community events), and dal baati churma (Rajasthani — mostly at home kitchens and festivals). If a restaurant menu has nihari, galouti kebab, and sheermal, you’ve found Lucknowi food.
Bollywood, Dance & Entertainment
FunAsia — DFW’s Hindi Entertainment Hub
1210 E Belt Line Rd, Richardson, TX 75081 • (214) 628-7512
FunAsia is THE cultural anchor for Hindi entertainment in DFW — movies, concerts, weddings, and cultural events under one roof. The complex includes a dedicated Bollywood theater (3 screens, $1.6M renovation) showing new Hindi releases, two banquet halls (500 capacity each), and the FunAsia Radio studio. KZMP 104.9 FM / AM 1110 broadcasts Bollywood and South Asian music to 800,000 listeners across DFW, promoting concerts and community events. funmoviegrill.com
Bollywood Theaters
- FunAsia Richardson — Dedicated Bollywood theater (above)
- AMC locations — Irving Mall 14, Stonebriar 24 (Frisco), NorthPark 15 (Dallas)
- Cinemark locations — Central Plano, Frisco Square and XD, Allen
Kathak & Bollywood Dance Schools
Kathak Rhythms — 4020 Hedgcoxe Rd, Ste 150, Plano; also in Coppell and Southlake. Founded 2011 by Guru Akhila Rao. THE premier Kathak school in Texas, listed on the Texas Commission on the Arts touring roster. Featured in a WFAA story on how Kathak has shaped young women across North Texas. Director Sunaina Rao trained from age 6 under her mother. Offers solo concerts, lecture-demonstrations, and full-length dance-theater productions. kathakrhythms.com
Note on Kathak: While Bharatanatyam is the classical dance of Tamil Nadu and Kuchipudi is Telugu, Kathak is the classical dance of the Hindi belt — originating in the courts of Lucknow and Jaipur. For Hindi-belt families, Kathak carries the same cultural weight that Bharatanatyam carries for Tamil families.
- Radha Krishna Temple Kathak Classes (Allen) — Taught by Smt. Rinku Bhattacharya Das, senior disciple of Guru Parveen Gangani.
- Adrija Dance Academy — Dallas, Frisco, Plano, Prosper, McKinney. Bollywood, Odissi, Contemporary, Folk. adrijadance.com
- Ethnique Performing Arts — Frisco, Plano, Coppell, Southlake, Dallas. Professional Bollywood dance training.
- Bollywood Rhythms — Frisco and Dallas. Bollywood, Tollywood, Bhangra, Folk. bollywoodrhythms.com
- Masti Dance Academy — Plano and Frisco. Indian folk + Bollywood; 10-week sessions with final performances.
Hindi Language & Education
Hindi has an advantage that other Indian languages don’t: it is widely understood across virtually all Indian communities, making it the default language of Indian community events, Bollywood, and inter-regional communication. But for families from the Hindi belt, maintaining mother-tongue fluency in the next generation is still a concern — American-born children default to English quickly.
- Vidya Vikas School at DFW Hindu Temple — 1605 N Britain Rd, Irving. Every Sunday, 9am-2:15pm. Teaches Hindi (and other Indic languages) to children from preschool through high school. THE primary weekend Hindi school in DFW. vv.dfwhindutemple.org
- Karya Siddhi Hanuman Temple — 12030 Independence Pkwy, Frisco. Offers Hindi language classes among other Indian languages.
- Chinmaya Mission DFW — Bala Vihar — Children’s classes at Dallas, Irving, and Frisco locations that include Hindi exposure through cultural education.
- Radha Krishna Temple (Allen) — Hindi is the primary language of instruction; children attending temple programs receive natural Hindi immersion.
Hindi does not yet have widespread LOTE (Languages Other Than English) offerings in DFW public school districts. Telugu has achieved remarkable visibility in Frisco ISD (surpassing Spanish in 2025), but Hindi education in DFW happens primarily through temple-based weekend schools and family conversation.
The Allen / Plano East Corridor
If DFW has a Hindi-belt heartland, it is the Allen / Murphy / Plano East corridor. Census data shows Hindi speakers outnumbering Telugu 3 to 1 here — the widest gap in any major DFW area. This is no accident: the Radha Krishna Temple sits at the center of this corridor, and Allen ISD (one of the top-rated districts in Collin County) acts as a magnet for Hindi-belt families who prioritize school quality.
Plano Central is another quiet Hindi stronghold — Hindi speakers outnumber Telugu 7.6 to 1 there. And across Tarrant County (Fort Worth, Arlington, Grapevine, Southlake), Hindi consistently leads every other Indian language. The pattern is clear: while Telugu families cluster tightly in the Irving-Coppell-Frisco corridor, Hindi-belt families spread more broadly but create their own pockets of density, especially in areas with newer construction and top-rated schools.
For Hindi-speaking families choosing where to live in DFW, the decision often comes down to:
- Maximum Hindi-belt neighbors + spiritual life: Allen / Murphy / Plano East (Radha Krishna Temple, Allen ISD, median $450-550K)
- Balanced Indian diversity + top schools: Plano West (all communities well-represented, Plano West Senior High, median ~$550K)
- Newer homes + rapid growth: Celina / Prosper (growing Indian population, new India Bazaar coming, median $500-600K)
- Maximum Indian infrastructure + value: Irving (historic Little India, Patel Brothers, DFW Hindu Temple, BAPS, median $300-400K)
- Hindi entertainment hub: Richardson (FunAsia complex, transition between city and suburbs, median $400-500K)
- Fort Worth side + affluent: Grapevine / Southlake / Colleyville (Carroll ISD, Kathak Rhythms Southlake, median $600K+)
- Growth corridor + good schools: Frisco (Frisco ISD, Hanuman Temple, Patel Brothers, median $500-600K)
For detailed neighborhood profiles, school district comparisons, H-1B employer data, cost of living, and climate information, see our full Indian Community guide for Dallas-Fort Worth.
Data Sources
U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey (2022 5-Year Estimates) • Community organization websites and direct verification • Local school district enrollment data • Zillow and Apartments.com (rent estimates) • Glassdoor and BLS Occupational Employment Statistics (salary data) • Redfin (home price data). Community population estimates reflect available Census language data combined with organization-reported figures. Read our full research methodology →