Orange, TX

Census place 4854132 · pop 19,177

D−39/ 100
🫤 Rough
D−
in TX
📍 Texas ranks #38 of 50 states →
🏆 Rent$1,149/mo · top 9%
🚽 Obesity42.1% · bottom 10%
Taxes
1.31% property · US 0.99%8.20% sales · US 7.00%None income · US 4.63%

Sales & income are statewide.

The breakdown — worst first

Adult obesity42.1%10

U.S. median 36.5% · worse than most cities

42.1% of adults · Share of adults with obesity (BMI ≥ 30).

Poor mental health19.4%17

U.S. median 17.4% · worse than most cities

19.4% of adults · Adults reporting frequent poor mental health (14+ days a month).

Uninsured adults15.0%17

U.S. median 9.3% · worse than most cities

15.0% of adults · Adults 18–64 without health insurance.

Bachelor's degree or higher18.6%18

U.S. median 24.3% · worse than most cities

18.6% have a bachelor's degree or higher · Share of adults 25+ with a bachelor's degree or higher.

Physical inactivity31.8%18

U.S. median 26.5% · worse than most cities

31.8% of adults · Adults with no leisure-time physical activity.

Broadband access87.1%21

U.S. median 90.0% · worse than most cities

87.1% of homes have broadband · Share of households with a broadband internet subscription.

Income inequality0.4821

U.S. median 0.43 · worse than most cities

Gini 0.48 (0 = equal, 1 = unequal) · Gini index of household income (0 = equal, 1 = unequal).

Adult smoking16.7%21

U.S. median 14.6% · worse than most cities

16.7% of adults · Share of adults who currently smoke.

Unemployment rateCounty-level4.4%24

U.S. median 3.6% · worse than most cities

4.4% unemployment · Share of the labor force out of work. Published by county, not city — every city in the county shares this figure.

Natural disaster riskCounty-level97/10025

U.S. median 77/100 · worse than most cities

97/100 FEMA risk (higher = riskier) · FEMA National Risk Index — wildfire, flood, earthquake, heat and more. Published by county, not city — every city in the county shares this figure.

Poverty rate15.4%33

U.S. median 12.1% · worse than most cities

15.4% live in poverty · Share of residents living below the federal poverty line.

Median household income$62,89133

U.S. median $67,857 · worse than most cities

$62,891 median household income · Median household income — a proxy for local economic health.

Property-tax burden1.31%34

U.S. median 0.99% · worse than most cities

1.31% of home value paid in property tax · Median real-estate taxes paid as a share of home value.

Homeownership59.0%36

U.S. median 67.2% · worse than most cities

59.0% own their home · Share of occupied homes that are owner-occupied.

Air quality (AQI)County-level44 AQI44

U.S. median 42 AQI · worse than most cities

44 median AQI · Median air quality index — lower is cleaner air. Published by county, not city — every city in the county shares this figure.

Population growth (5yr)+2.2%45

U.S. median +2.4% · worse than most cities

+2.2% population change (5yr) · 5-year population change — are people moving in, or fleeing?

Unhealthy air daysCounty-level3 days46

U.S. median 1 days · worse than most cities

3 unhealthy-air days per year · Days per year with unhealthy air (AQI above 100). Published by county, not city — every city in the county shares this figure.

Commute time23 min56

U.S. median 24 min · better than most cities

23 min average one-way commute · Average one-way commute to work, in minutes.

Housing cost$164,90081

U.S. median $214,900 · better than most cities

$164,900 median home value · Median home value — how expensive it is to buy in. Higher = less affordable.

Rent$1,149/mo91

U.S. median $1,756/mo · better than most cities

$1,149/mo typical rent · Typical monthly rent (Zillow Observed Rent Index, all home types).

Not measured for Orange: Crime, Property crime. Not every public source covers every city — EPA air monitors and Zillow rent only reach some places, and national crime data is still being added.

Frequently asked

Is Orange, TX a good place to live?
By the numbers, Orange scores 39/100 — a D− (Rough) on Shcity, which ranks U.S. cities on public data across 20 metrics like crime, cost, jobs and health. Its strongest area is rent and its weakest is adult obesity. Texas overall ranks #38 of 50 states. Whether it's "good" depends on what you value — re-weight the factors to score it your way.
Is Orange, TX expensive to live in?
Orange has a median home value of $164,900 and typical rent around $1,149/mo — more affordable than most U.S. cities.
What's the biggest downside of living in Orange, TX?
Its weakest measured area is adult obesity (42.1%) — 10/100, worse than most U.S. cities.
What is Orange, TX best at?
Its strongest measured area is rent ($1,149/mo) — 91/100, better than most U.S. cities.

Sources: U.S. Census (ACS), CDC PLACES, FBI Crime Data Explorer, BLS, EPA AirData, FEMA National Risk Index, and Zillow.