The Ritz-Carlton Residences Houston has sold 72 of 102 units—71% of inventory—before groundwork completion, with average transaction values landing near $2.8 million per residence, according to developer disclosures filed in Harris County last week. The tower at 1881 Post Oak Boulevard marks the brand's first standalone residential project in Texas and the fastest pre-sale pace for any Marriott-branded tower outside South Florida since 2019.
Developer Hines and Mexico City–based Dine began marketing units in Q3 2023 with closings scheduled for Q4 2025. The building's 35-story configuration includes 102 residences ranging from 2,400 to 7,200 square feet, priced between $2.1 million and $9.8 million. Three penthouses above 6,000 square feet closed in off-market transactions before public listing, two to Houston-based energy principals and one to a Dallas family office with upstream Permian exposure. The velocity outpaces The Residences at the St. Regis Houston, which required 19 months to reach equivalent absorption when it launched in 2016.
The pace matters because it confirms capital flowing into branded residential inventory in markets where property tax structures and estate-planning incentives create acquisition advantages over coastal gateways. Texas has no state income tax, and Harris County's 2.02% effective property tax rate remains 340 basis points below equivalent luxury brackets in Manhattan or Los Angeles once you account for transfer taxes and mansion levies. Single-family offices in Houston—many managing $500 million to $2 billion in hydrocarbon-derived wealth—are rotating liquidity from direct energy holdings into real assets with hospitality optionality. They want the brand operating infrastructure without the reporting requirements of a hotel REIT.
The Ritz-Carlton flag provides 24-hour concierge, in-residence dining from the ground-floor restaurant, and access to the adjacent Ritz-Carlton hotel's spa and meeting facilities. Owners receive Marriott Bonvoy Titanium Elite status and can enroll units in the brand's short-term rental program, which operates in 12 Ritz-Carlton Residences globally and generates gross yields between 4.1% and 6.7% depending on occupancy discipline. Houston's program launches in 2026 with a 120-night owner-use cap and property management taking 35% of gross rental revenue. Three buyers have already committed units to the rental pool, targeting corporate relocations and medical-tourism families using Texas Medical Center facilities.
Operators and allocators should watch whether Marriott accelerates additional Texas projects—the brand has preliminary site agreements in Austin and Dallas, both awaiting zoning clarity expected by March 2025. Track whether Houston's model—tower-only residential with adjacent hotel amenities rather than integrated mixed-use—becomes the template for secondary-market branded projects where land costs allow separation. The structure reduces construction complexity and gives family offices cleaner title without navigating condo-hotel regulations in 23 states that treat them as securities.
Hines has $4.2 billion in luxury residential under development across six U.S. markets, with Houston representing the firm's second Ritz-Carlton partnership after a $340 million Dallas tower that delivered in 2019 and stabilized at 96% occupancy within 11 months.