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Trip from Austin, TX to Palmer, TX

Compiled and reviewed by the US Trip Planner planning team at COD Solutions Oy · Last reviewed Apr 19, 2026 · Editorial standards

Drive Time

3h 16m

Distance

178 mi

286 km

Drive Score

9/10

Great drive

Same Day?

Yes, doable

Fuel Cost

$27

one way

EV Charging

Unknown

Best Time to Leave

Save up to 35 min
4 AM
3h 5m ★
6 AM
3h 17m
8 AM
3h 40m
10 AM
3h 25m
12 PM
3h 22m
3 PM
3h 26m
5 PM
3h 39m
8 PM
3h 9m

Estimated drive times based on typical traffic patterns. Actual times may vary with weather, construction, and real-time conditions.

Downtown Austin, TX, TX

Austin, TX

Wikimedia Commons

Downtown Palmer, TX, TX

Palmer, TX

Wikimedia Commons

Trip Overview

Embarking on the journey from Austin, TX to Palmer, TX covers 178 miles and is estimated to take around 3 hours and 16 minutes. This drive is easily manageable as a single-day trip, with a projected fuel cost of approximately $27. You'll primarily navigate via the Purple Heart Trail and I-35E, with a portion on the South Jack Kultgen Expressway. The route offers a practical experience, moving you across the familiar Great Plains region within Texas. With only one recommended stop, this trip is designed for efficiency, making it a straightforward option for a quick getaway or transit.

Trip Pace

Same-day drive is realistic

A same-day return is realistic if you keep stops short.

Break Rhythm

1 planned break

A short stop every 2 to 3 hours is enough for this drive.

Midpoint

89 miles from Austin, TX

A natural place for your longest stop of the day , about 1h 34m into the drive .

Main Roads

Road Distance Duration
Purple Heart Trail 129.2 mi 2h 14m
I 35E 27.8 mi 27m
South Jack Kultgen Expressway 6.6 mi 7m
Farm-to-Market Road 878 5.9 mi 10m
West Jefferson Street 2.3 mi 4m
Wyatt Street 1.9 mi 4m
Palmetto Road 1.2 mi 1m
Five Points Road 0.4 mi 1m
Longest stretch: Purple Heart Trail — 129.2 mi, about 2h 14m

Turn-by-Turn Driving Directions

Step-by-step road directions between Austin, TX and Palmer, TX.

1

Start on East 5th Street

0.3 mi · 52 sec · East 5th Street
Use the straight / right lanes.
2

Turn left onto Red River Street

0.1 mi · 20 sec · Red River Street
Use the left lane.
3

Turn right onto East 7th Street

0.1 mi · 17 sec · East 7th Street
Use the right lane.
4

Turn left onto North Interstate 35

0.2 mi · 26 sec · North Interstate 35
Use the left lane.
5

Take the ramp

0.2 mi · 22 sec
Toward I 35 North, US 290 East
6

Merge onto I 35; US 290

0.6 mi · 42 sec · Purple Heart Trail
7

Keep slight right at fork onto I 35; US 290

96 mi · 1 hr 40 min · Purple Heart Trail
Use the straight / slight right lanes.
8

Continue on I 35

6.6 mi · 7 min · South Jack Kultgen Expressway
Use the straight / slight right lanes.
9

Continue on I 35; US 77

33 mi · 33 min · Purple Heart Trail
Use the straight / slight right lanes.
10

Keep slight right at fork onto I 35E

28 mi · 27 min · I 35E
Toward I 35E: Dallas Use the slight right lane.
11

Take the exit

0.1 mi · 18 sec
Exit 399 Toward FM 66, FM 1446 Use the straight / slight right lanes.
12

Turn straight onto South Interstate 35E

0.2 mi · 23 sec · South Interstate 35E
13

Turn right onto Five Points Road

0.4 mi · 1 min · Five Points Road
14

Turn right onto FM 66

0.4 mi · 45 sec · South Rogers Street
15

Turn left onto US 77

0.2 mi · 33 sec · South Highway 77
16

Continue on US 77

0.2 mi · 31 sec · South Elm Street
17

Turn right onto US 287 Bus

0.2 mi · 26 sec · West Main Street
18

Continue on US 287 Bus

0.2 mi · 21 sec · Dr Martin Luther King Jr Boulevard
19

Turn left onto Wyatt Street

1.9 mi · 4 min · Wyatt Street
20

Continue on FM 878

1.2 mi · 1 min · Palmetto Road
21

Continue on FM 878

5.9 mi · 10 min · Farm-to-Market Road 878
22

Turn straight onto FM 878

2.3 mi · 4 min · West Jefferson Street
23

Arrive at destination

FM 813

Trip Plan

For this 178-mile drive, departing Austin in the morning will allow you to reach Palmer with ample daylight. With a duration of just over 3 hours and a single stop recommended, you have flexibility in pacing your journey. Keep an eye on your fuel levels, especially before heading onto the Purple Heart Trail, which accounts for the longest stretch. The 'turn-heavy' nature of this route means paying close attention to your GPS or navigation system to ensure you don't miss any crucial turns.

Morning Departure

An early start around 7-8 AM gets you there with plenty of daylight left.

Evening Departure

A late afternoon start means arriving after dark. Morning is better.

You can normally do this drive in one day.
Plan roughly 1 meaningful break for fuel, food, and rest.
The halfway point lands around 89 miles from Austin, TX, or about 1h 34m into the drive.
The longest continuous stretch on this route runs about 129.2 miles.

This is a comfortable same-day trip.

Departure

Before you leave

Start with fuel, water, and navigation already sorted so the first hour feels easy.

First stop

Around 39 miles or 42m in

Use this first pause for coffee, a restroom break, and a quick traffic check ahead.

Halfway reset

Around 89 miles or 1h 34m in

This is the best place for your longest stop, a real meal, and a full fuel check.

Final approach

Final hour starts around 2h 33m

Traffic, exits, and arrival timing usually matter more near Palmer, TX than in the middle of the route.

Before You Leave

+

Open the route before leaving Austin, TX so your first major turns are already loaded.

+

Leave with enough water and a charging cable within reach, not packed away.

+

Check your fuel range against the first long segment, especially if you are starting outside city service areas.

Day 1

Settle into the route from Austin, TX

This is one driving day of about 178 miles and 3h 16m.

Your first comfortable stop window is around 39 miles from Austin, TX.
This route can stay practical as a one-day drive if traffic stays reasonable.
Plan about 1 real break rather than only quick fuel stops.
The longest stretch is on Purple Heart Trail for about 129.2 miles.

Where to Stop

Rest stops, refuel points, and overnight suggestions along this route.

Downtown Bellmead, TX, TX

Mid-route town

Meal stop

Bellmead, TX

89 mi into the route

Best for: Lunch, fuel, and a longer reset

This sits close to the middle of the route, so it works well for the longest stop of the day.

Pacing Suggestions

Jarrell, TX

Fuel and coffee

A short stop after about 39 miles helps settle the day before fatigue starts building.

Hewitt, TX

Meal break

The midpoint is around 89 miles from Austin, TX, which is a good place for a longer meal and fuel stop.

Before the longest stretch

Fuel check

Top up before Purple Heart Trail if your tank is already low. That segment runs about 129.2 miles.

These stop ideas are pacing suggestions — the exact town or exit can change with traffic, hotel plans, and fuel range.

Heads-up: tricky spots

5 of 13

5 decision points cluster between mile 0.3 and 164.6 — GPS handles the exact turns, but know they're coming. Your lane choice matters more than the turn itself.

6
0.3 mi into trip | ~0m in | Red River Street

Turn left onto Red River Street

Lane positioning matters here

Use the left lane.
7
0.5 mi into trip | ~1m in | East 7th Street

Turn right onto East 7th Street

Lane positioning matters here

Use the right lane.
6
1.5 mi into trip | ~3m in | I 35; US 290 / Purple Heart Trail

Keep slight right at fork onto I 35; US 290 / Purple Heart Trail

Highway fork - watch signs carefully. Lane positioning matters here

Use the straight / slight right lanes.
7
136.8 mi into trip | ~2h 24m in | I 35E

Keep slight right at fork onto I 35E toward I 35E: Dallas

Highway fork - watch signs carefully. Lane positioning matters here

Use the slight right lane. Toward I 35E: Dallas
8
164.6 mi into trip | ~2h 51m in

Take the exit toward FM 66, FM 1446

Exit ramp - move to the correct lane early. Lane positioning matters here. Multiple destination signs - pick the right one

Use the straight / slight right lanes. Exit 399 Toward FM 66, FM 1446

Fuel & Cost

Regular Gas

$26.90 one way

$53.79 round trip

$3.84/gal 25.4 MPG avg 62 kg CO2
Fuel Type $/gal One Way Round Trip
midgrade $4.20 $29.44 $58.88
premium $4.54 $31.78 $63.56
diesel $5.61 $39.30 $78.60

No toll roads detected on this route.

Estimated Trip Cost (one way, 1 person)

Fuel

$27

Meals

$25–$50

Total

$52–$77

Rough estimate based on US averages. Hotel $80–$140/night, meals $25–$50/day.

Estimated CO2 emission: 62.3 kg one way. Prices: EIA weekly data, 2026-04-13.

Driving Electric?

About $19 in charging · 0 stops · 66% less CO2

Vehicle Type kWh Stops DC Fast Home Charge
Average EV 53.4 0 $18.69 $8.54
Efficient EV 44.5 0 $15.58 $7.12
EV Truck/SUV 71.2 0 $24.92 $11.39

Gas CO2

62 kg

EV CO2

21 kg (66% less)

This trip is well within single-charge range for most EVs. No charging stops needed if you start fully charged.

DC fast charging avg $0.35/kWh. Home charging avg $0.16/kWh. US grid CO2: 0.39 kg/kWh.

Travel Intel

Current conditions at both ends of the drive.

Forecast as of Apr 15, 2026

Origin

Austin, TX

Afternoon in Austin on Sunday

Local time

2:18 PM

CDT

Current temp

63°F

Unavailable

Live forecast

Destination

Palmer, TX

Afternoon in Palmer on Sunday

Local time

2:18 PM

CDT

Current temp

60°F

Unavailable

Live forecast

Seasonal Notes

Summer travel usually means heavier construction, hotter rest stops, and busier weekend traffic around major cities.

Winter travel shortens daylight, so a route that looks manageable on paper can feel much longer after dark.

Holiday weekends tend to make both departure and arrival windows slower than the raw route time suggests.

Time zone

Same local time

Origin and destination are on the same clock, so arrival timing is easier to judge at a glance.

Temperature spread

3 degrees cooler at arrival

A meaningful temperature swing is a good cue to rethink layers, water, and how soon you want to arrive.

Road read

3h 16m on the road

Use the two city cards together: check the sky where you start, then compare it with the local time and temperature at arrival.

Weather data from the National Weather Service. Conditions may change; check closer to your travel date.

What kind of drive is this?

This drive presents a 'turn-heavy local drive' profile, meaning you'll encounter frequent directional changes rather than a continuous highway stretch. Only 20% of the journey is on highways, so expect a more engaged driving experience. The longest uninterrupted segment spans 129.2 miles on the Purple Heart Trail, offering a significant period of consistent travel before transitions. As you progress, the route shifts between these local roads and expressway sections, requiring your attention to navigation and road conditions.

Only 20% highway — the rest is turn-by-turn surface driving.
23 navigation steps total — most of the decisions cluster near the start and finish.
Longest single stretch: 129.2 mi on Purple Heart Trail.

How Hard Is This Drive?

6/10

Expect a hands-on drive with frequent turns and local roads rather than long highway stretches. You will hit about 13 points where you need to pay attention to lane position or signs. The trickiest moment comes around 0.3 miles in near Red River Street.

Driving Effort 6/10

Moderate - straightforward overall, but long enough or busy enough to require pacing

Balances navigation complexity with total wheel time.

This drive requires moderate attention. Across 178 miles you will encounter 13 spots where lane choice or exit timing matters. Not difficult for experienced highway drivers, but worth previewing the tricky sections before you go.

Where does it get tricky?

The main spots that need attention: at 0.3 miles (Red River Street): Lane positioning matters here; at 0.5 miles (East 7th Street): Lane positioning matters here; at 1.5 miles (I 35; US 290 / Purple Heart Trail): Highway fork - watch signs carefully. Lane positioning matters here.

Towns Mentioned on Route Signs

Based on OSRM destination-sign hints, not a full list of every settlement the road passes.

Between Austin, TX and Palmer, TX, road signs point toward Fm 66 and Fm 1446.

Fm 66

164.6 mi in | ~2h 51m

Fm 1446

164.6 mi in | ~2h 51m

About the Cities

Starting in Austin, TX

Full guide →

“City of the Violet Crown” · Founded 1835

Austin is a city of about 1,054,000 (2026) surpassing Fort Worth to become the 4th most populous city in Texas. It is on the southeast edge of the Hill Country region of Texas, making it the fourth-largest city in the state and the 11th-largest in the country. It is the capital of Texas and a college town, and also a center of an alternative culture away from the major cities on the US coasts, though the city is rapidly gentrifying with its rising popularity. Austin's attitude is commonly emblazoned about town on T-shirts and bumper stickers that read: "Keep Austin Weird." Austin is also marketed as the Live Music Capital of the World due to the large number of venues.

Top landmarks

  • Texas State Capitol — capitol and seat of government of the U.S. state of Texas
  • Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum — presidential library and museum for U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson in Austin,...
  • Texas State Cemetery — historic cemetery in Austin, Texas, USA

City content from Wikivoyage (CC BY-SA 4.0) and Wikidata (CC0).

Who Is This Route For?

Weekend Trip

Doable as a same-day drive at 3h 16m. Total distance: 178 miles.

Family Friendly

Moderate complexity with 1 natural rest stops along the way.

Solo Traveler

3h 16m drive, comfortable solo distance.

Scenic Drive

Mostly surface roads route profile.

Frequently Asked Questions

The longest stretch is about 129.2 miles on Purple Heart Trail. The full list of main roads is in the Roads section above.

We did not find dedicated rest areas on this route. For a drive this long, plan bathroom and stretch breaks around gas stations, fast-food stops, or small-town downtowns — check the Nearby Places section for options.

It helps. This route has a higher-than-average number of complex decision points, which get harder in the dark. If the last hour of the trip is on surface roads or mountain grades, aim to arrive at Palmer, TX before sunset when you can. Check the Trip Plan for departure windows that land you in daylight.

Only with planning. This is a long drive for kids — consider splitting it into two days rather than pushing through. Plan at least 1 meaningful breaks. Dedicated rest areas are limited, so plan gas or food stops as your bathroom breaks.

The main spots that need attention: at 0.3 miles (Red River Street): Lane positioning matters here; at 0.5 miles (East 7th Street): Lane positioning matters here; at 1.5 miles (I 35; US 290 / Purple Heart Trail): Highway fork - watch signs carefully. Lane positioning matters here.

Possible but tiring. At 3.3 hours each way, an in-and-out day trip would put you behind the wheel for 6.6 hours — manageable with a long break at Palmer, TX, but most travelers stay overnight.

How this page is built

Compiled by the US Trip Planner planning team at COD Solutions Oy from open government datasets — OSRM over OpenStreetMap for geometry, and EIA for fuel prices. See our methodology for refresh cadence and limitations.

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