10 Stereotypes About Texas (Which Ones Are Actually True?)
Let’s settle this once and for all—separating Texas fact from fiction, one stereotype at a time.
Everyone has an opinion about Texas, especially people who’ve never been here. We’re either all gun-toting cowboys riding horses to work, or we’re a diverse, modern state that Hollywood gets completely wrong.
The truth, as usual, is somewhere in the middle — some stereotypes exist for a reason, while others are so absurd they’d be funny if people didn’t actually believe them.
Here’s a breakdown of 10 of the most common Texas stereotypes.
1. Everyone Owns Guns — MOSTLY TRUE
Texas has high gun ownership rates and famously loose gun laws, but “everyone” is an exaggeration.
About 45% of Texas households own firearms, which is higher than the national average, but that means over half of Texans don’t own guns.
Urban areas like Austin and Houston have lower ownership rates than rural counties. The gun culture is real and visible, but it’s not universal across all Texans.
2. Everything Is Bigger in Texas — SURPRISINGLY TRUE
This isn’t just marketing — Texas genuinely does things on a larger scale.
We have the largest state fair, the largest honky-tonk, the largest convenience stores (Buc-ee’s), and a Capitol building taller than the U.S. Capitol.
Our ranches are enormous, our portions are generous, and our highways are wide. Even our egos might be bigger. This stereotype has enough truth to justify the bragging.
3. Everyone Rides Horses — MOSTLY FALSE

Unless you live on a ranch or in very rural areas, you’re driving a truck, not riding a horse to work.
Houston has more traffic than horses, and Austin’s transportation debates involve scooters and public transit, not hitching posts.
That said, Texas has a strong equestrian culture, rodeos are hugely popular, and horse ownership is common in rural areas. Just don’t expect to see horses on downtown Dallas streets.
4. We All Talk Like Cowboys — PARTIALLY TRUE
The Texas drawl exists, but it varies wildly by region, generation, and background.
East Texas sounds more Southern, the Panhandle has a distinct accent, and urban areas have diverse speech patterns reflecting our multicultural population.
Younger Texans and city dwellers often have less pronounced accents than older, rural Texans. Yes, some Texans say “y’all” and “fixin’ to,” but plenty sound like they’re from anywhere in America.
5. It’s Always Hot — MOSTLY FALSE

Texas is huge, and the climate varies dramatically. Amarillo gets snow and has four distinct seasons, while South Texas stays warm year-round.
El Paso is desert dry, Houston is swampy humid, and the Hill Country has gorgeous spring and fall weather.
Yes, summers are brutal almost everywhere, but winter in the Panhandle can be genuinely cold. The “always hot” stereotype ignores Texas’s geographic diversity.
6. Everyone Wears Cowboy Boots and Hats — SOMETIMES TRUE

You’ll see plenty of cowboy boots and hats, especially in rural areas, at rodeos, or in Fort Worth (which embraces its “Cowtown” identity).
But walk around Houston’s business district or Austin’s tech scene, and you’ll see standard business casual or tech-bro hoodies.
Many Texans own boots for special occasions but wear sneakers daily. The Western wear is real but situational, not a uniform.
7. Texans Are Obsessed With Texas — ABSOLUTELY TRUE
We are unapologetically proud of being Texan in a way that baffles people from other states. We wear Texas-shaped everything, fly the state flag everywhere, and genuinely believe Texas is the best place on Earth. This isn’t arrogance (okay, maybe a little) — it’s genuine state pride rooted in our unique history as an independent republic. If you think we’re too obsessed with Texas, you clearly haven’t spent enough time here.
8. We’re All Conservative — PARTIALLY TRUE

Texas leans Republican in statewide elections, but “all conservative” ignores millions of Democrats, especially in cities.
Austin is famously liberal, Houston and Dallas have progressive pockets, and South Texas has strong Democratic traditions.
The state is politically diverse, and urban-rural divides mirror national patterns. Texas politics are more purple than outsiders think, even if Republicans currently hold power.
9. BBQ Is Life — COMPLETELY TRUE
Texans take barbecue seriously to an almost religious degree.
We debate brisket preparation, wait hours in line for Franklin or Snow’s BBQ, and have strong opinions about sauce (or no sauce).
BBQ isn’t just food here — it’s cultural identity, family tradition, and serious business. This stereotype is 100% accurate, and we’re proud of it.
10. Everyone Drives Pickup Trucks — MOSTLY TRUE
Texas leads the nation in truck sales, and F-150s are everywhere.
Trucks are practical for ranch work, hauling, and bad weather, but also serve as status symbols and cultural markers. That said, plenty of Texans drive sedans, SUVs, and hybrids.
The truck culture is real and visible, but it’s not literally everyone — just a disproportionately high number compared to other states.
The Verdict: We’re Complicated
Texas stereotypes exist for a reason — many contain kernels of truth amplified by our larger-than-life state pride.
We’re not all cowboys, but Western culture influences us. We’re not all conservative, but traditional values run strong.
We’re not just one thing, which is exactly what makes Texas interesting.
The real Texas is more diverse, complex, and surprising than any stereotype can capture, but that won’t stop us from leaning into the fun ones.
Which stereotype bugs you most, or which one do you proudly embody? We’d love to hear how you navigate being Texan in a world full of assumptions.