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Inside Westlake’s Gated Communities and Luxury Enclaves

June 4, 2026
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If you are looking at Westlake, you are not shopping for just another luxury suburb. You are stepping into one of North Texas’s most private and tightly held markets, where gated entry, large homesites, custom architecture, and limited inventory shape the experience from the start. This guide will help you understand Westlake’s standout gated communities and luxury enclaves, how they differ from one another, and what that means for your move. Let’s dive in.

Why Westlake stands apart

Westlake has built its identity around master-planned residential neighborhoods, controlled density, and a low-tax municipal service model. According to the town, Westlake handles core infrastructure while homeowners associations often manage private roads, landscaping, trails, lighting, and similar neighborhood features.

That structure helps explain why Westlake feels different from many nearby luxury markets. Instead of a broad suburban layout with large retail districts and higher housing volume, Westlake leans into privacy, architectural controls, and enclave-style living.

It is also a scarcity-driven market. As of late May 2026, Westlake had a median listing home price of $2,994,998 with 63 active homes for sale. That is materially higher and much tighter in supply than nearby Southlake and Colleyville, which gives Westlake a more exclusive position in the DFW luxury landscape.

What defines a Westlake enclave

In Westlake, luxury is not just about square footage. It is often about the full package, including gated entry, concierge-style services, larger lots, preserve land, club access, and design standards that shape the look and feel of the community.

You will also notice that Westlake does not follow one architectural formula. Across its communities, the market includes traditional, transitional, European-inspired, Santa Barbara, Mediterranean, contemporary, and modern homes. In Entrada, the design direction shifts toward a Catalan and Southern European look, giving buyers a very different experience from the estate enclaves.

Vaquero: the flagship golf enclave

Vaquero is often the first name people mention when they think about Westlake luxury. The town describes it as a guard-gated community of roughly 298 homes organized around a Tom Fazio-designed golf course, with private club facilities, concierge service, and long-standing architectural and landscape guidelines.

Current public market examples place Vaquero homes from the mid-$4 millions into the high-$6 millions, with lots ranging from about half an acre to 3.5 acres. For buyers who want a golf-centered lifestyle with privacy and established prestige, Vaquero remains one of the clearest expressions of Westlake’s ultra-premium identity.

Quail Hollow: newer estates on one-acre-plus sites

Quail Hollow brings a newer take on the Westlake gated lifestyle. The official community page describes it as a gated 188-acre neighborhood with 96 homesites, all on lots over 1 acre.

That lot size alone sets a strong tone, but the amenity story matters too. Residents can access Vaquero Golf Club memberships and clubhouse amenities, including fitness, tennis, dining, children’s activities, and social events.

Current public pricing already reaches trophy-estate levels, with examples around $9.1 million and $10.9 million. If your priority is newer luxury construction, expansive homesites, and a club-oriented lifestyle, Quail Hollow deserves close attention.

Westlake Ranch: concierge living with active amenities

Westlake Ranch stands out because it blends gated privacy with a more amenity-forward setup. The developer describes it as an electronically guard-gated community with 32 homesites, lot sizes around 0.5 to 0.8 acres, and a 4,500-square-foot minimum home size.

The amenity package includes full-time concierge service, three indoor pickleball courts, a clubhouse, a fishing hole, and walking trails. HOA dues also include club and pickleball access, which gives this community a distinct lifestyle profile compared with golf-driven options.

Current public listings are in the mid-$5 millions. For buyers who want newer construction, a polished neighborhood feel, and shared amenities beyond golf, Westlake Ranch offers a compelling option.

Terra Bella: preserved land and estate character

Terra Bella is a gated 54.7-acre development with just 28 lots, which speaks to the lower-density approach many buyers want in Westlake. The community also includes a 22.6-acre open-space preserve with a hike-and-bike trail.

The setting is one of its main draws. Terra Bella is known for wooded and creek-side surroundings on the eastern edge of Westlake, and current public listings show estate homes on roughly one-acre sites.

Market examples place pricing in the mid-$5 millions to mid-$6 millions. Architectural styles in public listings include Santa Barbara, Mediterranean, and contemporary homes, giving the neighborhood a custom-estate feel rather than a repetitive one.

Glenwyck Farms: wooded privacy and park space

Glenwyck Farms offers a more tucked-away enclave experience. It spans more than 100 acres, with homesites ranging from 0.80 acres to more than 1 acre, plus a 13.5-acre park with a running brook, rustic bridges, and a paved walking path.

In market materials, Glenwyck Farms is often treated as a gated enclave. Current public listing examples show European-inspired and transitional custom homes in the roughly $4.8 million to $6.3 million range.

For buyers who value mature natural surroundings and a quieter estate setting, Glenwyck Farms has a very different feel from highly club-centered communities. It is more about privacy, landscape, and custom-home character.

Granada and Knolls at Solana

Granada is an 84-home luxury subdivision on approximately 84 acres north of Dove Road and south of Solana Boulevard. The town’s zoning ordinance sets a minimum lot size of 23,500 square feet, an average lot size of 30,000 square feet, and minimum building sizes of 3,000 square feet for one-story homes and 4,000 square feet for two-story homes.

Current public listings show Granada estates in the mid-$4 millions, including guard-gated examples on about 0.76 acres. Compared with some of Westlake’s larger-lot enclaves, Granada delivers an upscale estate product on a somewhat tighter footprint while still maintaining strong luxury standards.

Nearby, Knolls at Solana is a 64-acre, 54-lot residential development with more than one-third of the site dedicated to open space and a conservation area. Current public examples show contemporary hilltop homes around the mid-$3 millions, which can make it an interesting entry point for buyers who want Westlake prestige with a different architectural and price profile.

Entrada: a walkable exception

Not every Westlake luxury option follows the traditional gated-estate model. Entrada is the notable exception.

The town says this 85-acre mixed-use project will eventually include office, retail, hotel, entertainment, and 322 residential units made up of villas, townhomes, and condominiums. It also features a canal, trails, plazas, dining and retail components, and an onsite Primrose School.

Current public listings show a much broader price ladder here, from buildable lots and townhomes to single-family homes around the upper-$3 millions. If you want a more walkable setting and a denser, more urban feel within Westlake, Entrada offers a very different lifestyle than the larger private estate communities.

Newer communities still shaping the market

One important thing to know is that Westlake’s story is still evolving. The town’s development activity page continues to track construction and approvals in Entrada, Quail Hollow, Westlake Ranch, Knolls at Solana, Villaggio, Aspen Estates, and Solana Hills.

Villaggio, for example, is planned as a private gated community with 17 lots on a 37.5-acre site. For buyers and sellers alike, that ongoing development activity matters because it means Westlake is not fully built out yet, even though supply remains limited overall.

Lot sizes, amenities, and price tiers

One of Westlake’s biggest differentiators is lot size. Quail Hollow is defined by 1-acre-plus homesites, while Terra Bella and Glenwyck Farms emphasize larger estate sites with natural surroundings. Vaquero can range from roughly half-acre lots to multi-acre estates, and Westlake Ranch stays estate-oriented at about 0.5 to 0.8 acres.

Granada is a bit different, with upscale but somewhat smaller estate lots around 23,500 to 30,000 square feet. Entrada moves in another direction entirely, with villas, townhomes, condominiums, and a more urban layout.

Amenities also split along lifestyle lines. Vaquero and Quail Hollow lean heavily into golf, club access, and concierge-style living. Glenwyck Farms, Terra Bella, Knolls at Solana, and Westlake Ranch place more emphasis on trails, open space, preserves, and parkland, while Westlake Ranch adds indoor pickleball as a major differentiator.

How Westlake compares with Southlake and Colleyville

Westlake, Southlake, and Colleyville all sit in the premium DFW corridor, but they serve different buyer preferences. Southlake is a larger city with a stronger retail and civic core, while Colleyville is known for a quieter community-of-neighborhoods feel and a broader luxury price spectrum.

Westlake is more enclave-driven. The combination of limited supply, higher median price, HOA-managed neighborhood features, and stronger emphasis on privacy and architectural controls gives it a distinct identity.

In practical terms, Westlake tends to appeal most to buyers who want a privacy-first ecosystem built around gated access, large lots, preserve land, and carefully controlled neighborhood design. If that is what you are after, there are few places in North Texas that compete directly with it.

What buyers should consider before choosing a community

The right Westlake enclave depends on the lifestyle you want, not just the home itself. As you compare options, it helps to think about a few specific questions:

  • Do you want golf and club access, or would you rather prioritize trails, open space, and lower-key privacy?
  • Are you looking for a one-acre-plus estate setting, or do you prefer a more manageable lot with strong shared amenities?
  • Do you want an established enclave like Vaquero, or are you more interested in newer construction opportunities in places like Quail Hollow or Westlake Ranch?
  • Would a walkable mixed-use setting like Entrada fit your day-to-day lifestyle better than a traditional gated estate neighborhood?
  • How important is school access and school-option flexibility in your home search?

In a market this specialized, those details matter. They shape not only your day-to-day experience, but also how well a property fits your long-term goals.

If you are considering a move into Westlake or preparing to sell a luxury home in this part of DFW, working with a team that understands gated estates, custom homes, and the nuances between these enclaves can make the process far smoother. Connect with The Wall Team Realty Associates for trusted guidance tailored to Westlake’s luxury market.

FAQs

What makes Westlake different from other luxury suburbs near Fort Worth?

  • Westlake stands out for its smaller size, lower housing supply, higher median listing price, gated and enclave-style neighborhoods, larger homesites, and stronger emphasis on privacy and architectural controls.

Which Westlake community is best for golf-centered luxury living?

  • Vaquero is Westlake’s flagship golf community, and Quail Hollow also offers access to Vaquero Golf Club memberships and clubhouse amenities.

Which Westlake neighborhoods offer larger estate lots?

  • Quail Hollow features lots over 1 acre, while Glenwyck Farms and Terra Bella also emphasize large estate homesites. Vaquero can include both half-acre and multi-acre properties.

What is unique about Entrada in Westlake?

  • Entrada differs from Westlake’s traditional estate enclaves because it is a mixed-use community with villas, townhomes, condominiums, a canal, trails, plazas, and planned retail, dining, hotel, and office components.

Are new luxury communities still being developed in Westlake?

  • Yes. The town continues to track development activity in communities such as Entrada, Quail Hollow, Westlake Ranch, Knolls at Solana, Villaggio, Aspen Estates, and Solana Hills.

What price range should buyers expect in Westlake luxury enclaves?

  • Westlake’s citywide median listing price is $2,994,998, while many of its luxury enclaves show current or recent public examples from the mid-$3 millions to over $10 million, depending on the community, lot size, and amenities.

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