Walk-time mapping · Texas · Immediate pedestrian footprint

5 Minutes On Foot From Austin, TX

A 5-minute walk — roughly 400 metres at average pace — is the smallest actionable trade area in urban retail. This is the core loyalty zone for coffee, bakeries, lunch counters, and any concept whose customers arrive on foot without deliberate trip planning.

30.2672° N · 97.7431° W · Austin city centre

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Coverage analysis

What 5 minutes on foot covers in Austin.

Austin's drive-time map is shaped by the Colorado River, a single congested loop highway (MoPac/I-35), and explosive northward sprawl into Williamson County. A 15-minute radius from downtown looks tiny on paper but routinely fails to capture the actual catchment because of bridge bottlenecks.

At 5 minutes on foot, the Austin walk-time isochrone captures the immediate pedestrian footprint — the area where pedestrian customers make routine, repeat visits without any deliberate trip planning — the true walkshed of impulse and convenience. Unlike a simple ≈ 400 m radius circle, the real pedestrian-network polygon follows Austin's actual street grid, accounts for crossings, parks, and dedicated walk paths, and contracts sharply around freeways, rail corridors, and waterways that break pedestrian continuity.

Walk-shed area at 5 minutes: ≈ 0.2–0.4 km² in a standard urban grid. The 5-minute isochrone is the standard input for pedestrian trade-area analysis, walkability scoring, and proximity-retail siting.

The city-level population of 974,447 and a median household income of $86,556 give a sense of Austin's density, but the figure that matters for walkable-retail siting is the population inside the pedestrian polygon — not the city as a whole. That number shifts dramatically depending on whether you're anchored in a high-density urban core or a lower-density neighbourhood where blocks are long and crossings are scarce. Use the tool above to set your actual candidate address, then generate the isochrone to see the real walk shed.

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