Hood County seat where fast suburban growth meets a historic courthouse square
Granbury anchors Hood County, one of the fastest-growing exurban corridors southwest of Fort Worth, where an influx of retirees and remote workers has layered new demographic complexity onto a historically deep-red rural base.
| Group | Granbury, TX | National |
|---|---|---|
▶White (Non-Hispanic)(13) | 85.1% | 57.4% |
▶Hispanic / Latino(10) | 11.0% | 19.3% |
Multiracial / Other | 1.8% | 4.0% |
▶Black / African American(5) | 0.7% | 12.2% |
▶Native American / Alaska Native(5) | 0.7% | 0.9% |
▶Asian(6) | 0.6% | 6.0% |
Catholic-Evangelical edge: -54.5pp (vs national 4.5pp). A strongly Evangelical-leaning religious profile, which nationally correlates with Republican-leaning rural and exurban communities.
| Tradition | % Pop | % Adherents | US Pop | US Adherents |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 31.7% | 67.3% | — | — | |
| 8.1% | 17.3% | — | — | |
| 5.3% | 11.2% | — | — | |
| 2.0% | 4.2% | — | — | |
LDS (Mormon) | 1.4% | 2.9% | — | — |
Non-religiousPopulation | 52.9% | — | — | — |
Who lives in the Granbury, TX metro area? 210,571 residents across 4 counties.
26% of adults hold a bachelor's degree — 7pp below the national average. Places with similar education levels vote R+3 on average nationally.
Scale, voting-age share, and this geography's footprint inside the national electorate.
Income, attainment, and ownership indicators that often shape coalition structure and turnout behavior.
Age structure, language use, and nativity signals that explain how this geography differs from state and nation.
| Offices | Margin A | Margin B | Split |
|---|---|---|---|
| President vs Senate | R+65.9 | R+61.7 | 4.2pp |