A note on what “Spring Branch” means: the incorporated city covers roughly 1.9 square miles and about 250 residents. Most of what people call Spring Branch is the wider unincorporated corridor along US 281 that shares the name.
The D. Knibbe family settled the site in 1852, drawn by the springs and creeks that fed into the Guadalupe River system from the limestone hills. The community that grew around the Knibbe homestead took its name from the spring-fed branch (creek) that ran through the area. For more than 160 years, Spring Branch remained unincorporated — a loose collection of ranches, a school district, a volunteer fire department, and a few businesses along US 281.
That changed on November 3, 2015, when residents voted to incorporate. Spring Branch officially became a city on November 19, 2015. The motivation was defensive — similar to Lakeway in 1974 and Garden Ridge in 1972 — a response to the threat of annexation by larger neighboring jurisdictions and a desire to control local zoning as development pressure from San Antonio and New Braunfels pushed northwest along the US 281 corridor.
Spring Branch sits on US 281, the highway that connects San Antonio to Johnson City, Marble Falls, and the Highland Lakes. The town's commercial life clusters along this corridor: gas stations, a few restaurants, real estate offices, and the kind of rural services (feed stores, equipment rental, veterinary clinics) that serve a community still transitioning from ranching to residential.
The most notable business in the area is Rebecca Creek Distillery, located at 26605 Bulverde Road (technically a San Antonio address, but geographically in the Spring Branch orbit). The distillery produces Texas whiskey and vodka. It is open Wednesday through Sunday for tasting seminars and sampling; walking tours have been suspended by the operator. Confirm current hours before you go.
The Spring Branch area is also home to several summer camps, retreat centers, and outdoor education facilities that take advantage of the Hill Country terrain — rocky creeks, live oak groves, and proximity to both Canyon Lake and the Guadalupe River.
US 281 through Spring Branch is a transitional road. South of here, it's suburban San Antonio sprawl — strip malls, traffic lights, chain restaurants. North of here, it's open ranch country — cattle guards, low-water crossings, and the occasional winery. Spring Branch is where the transition happens. The speed limit drops, the landscape opens up, and the Hill Country begins in earnest.
For Canyon Lake visitors, Spring Branch is the back way in — US 281 north to FM 311 or FM 3159 connects to the western reaches of the lake without going through the FM 306/Startzville corridor. It's less direct but less crowded, particularly on summer weekends when FM 306 backs up.
Spring Branch is on US 281, approximately 20 miles north of Loop 1604 in San Antonio and 21 miles northwest of New Braunfels. The nearest full-service grocery is H-E-B on US 281 in the Bulverde area (10 miles south). Gas is available along US 281 in town. The Spring Branch ISD serves the area's schools. Cell service is reliable along the highway corridor.
Spring Branch is the western gateway to the Canyon Lake area and the point where the San Antonio suburbs end and the Hill Country begins. Its 2015 incorporation was an act of self-preservation — a community deciding to control its own future before someone else did. For visitors, it's a waypoint and a whiskey stop. For residents, it's a small city trying to figure out how to grow without losing the rural character that made people move there in the first place.
Spring Branch's 2015 incorporation vote was contentious. The community had functioned without city government for 163 years. Many residents valued that independence — no city taxes, no zoning restrictions, no building permits. But development pressure was real. San Antonio's suburban edge was creeping north along US 281, and without incorporation, Spring Branch had no legal mechanism to control what got built, where, or how dense.
The vote passed, and Spring Branch became a general-law city — the most limited form of Texas municipal government. It can zone, it can regulate land use within its boundaries, and it can levy a small property tax. What it cannot do (yet) is provide water, sewer, police, or fire services. Those still come from Comal County, the local water supply corporations, and the Spring Branch Volunteer Fire Department. The city government is minimal by design — a mayor, a city council, and a part-time administrator. The budget is small. The ambition is defensive: control growth, not provide services.
Spring Branch Independent School District serves the area and should not be confused with the Spring Branch ISD in Houston (a much larger district with the same name). The local SBISD operates several campuses serving the rural communities between Canyon Lake and the Guadalupe River corridor. Smithson Valley High School, in the neighboring Comal ISD, draws some students from the Spring Branch area depending on exact address.
Before the highway and the subdivisions, Spring Branch was ranch country — cattle, goats, and hay. Some of that persists. Drive a mile off US 281 in any direction and you'll find working ranches, cattle guards across county roads, and the kind of fencing that says "this is not a subdivision entrance." The tension between old Spring Branch (ranches, open land, no rules) and new Spring Branch (subdivisions, deed restrictions, city zoning) is the defining local politics.
The Knibbe family's 1852 settlement was drawn by water — the springs and spring-fed creeks that made this particular stretch of Hill Country viable for livestock before windmills and well-drilling made the drier land accessible. Those springs still flow, feeding into Guadalupe tributaries that eventually reach Canyon Lake or the river below the dam.
The area's most notable commercial attraction is Rebecca Creek Distillery, which produces Texas whiskey, vodka, and gin. The distillery is located at 26605 Bulverde Road — technically a San Antonio mailing address, but geographically it sits in the Spring Branch orbit, north of Loop 1604 and south of the Spring Branch city limits. The operator has suspended walking tours and offers a seminar and sampling experience in the tasting room instead; it is closed Monday and Tuesday. The whiskey is distributed statewide and the distillery draws visitors from both San Antonio and the Canyon Lake area.
Spring Branch's relationship to Canyon Lake is indirect but real. US 281 north from Spring Branch connects to FM 311 and FM 3159, which lead to the western and northern reaches of the lake. This is the "back way" to Canyon Lake — avoiding the FM 306 corridor through Startzville that carries most of the traffic. Locals who live on the lake's west side use US 281 through Spring Branch as their primary route to San Antonio. Visitors rarely take this route because it's less obvious, but it's faster on summer weekends when FM 306 is gridlocked.
Spring Branch is part of the canyonlake.ai network. Guide: Gus.