Success Stories

Why Companies Are Moving to Texas for Business Growth

For organizations evaluating where to grow, scale, and compete, the decision goes beyond where you can operate. It’s about where you can win. 

Across industries, companies are choosing Texas not only as a place to do business, but as a place to build long-term advantage. Their experiences point to something more meaningful than rankings or incentives. They reflect a consistent ability to execute, scale, and grow with confidence. 

As TxEDC investor, Plug and Play put it, “Texas is one of the few places where you can build, scale, and lead—all at once.”  

Scale with Speed and Certainty 

For companies operating at scale, Texas offers something increasingly difficult to find: the ability to grow quickly without unnecessary friction. 

Walmart’s long-standing presence in Texas tells that story. Since opening its first store in Mount Pleasant in 1975, the company has expanded to hundreds of locations and employs nearly 180,000 Texans today. What stands out is not just the size of that footprint, but the pace at which it continues to grow. 

New stores are opening across fast-growing communities like Frisco, Cypress, and Melissa, with additional locations already planned. That expansion is driven by the fundamentals Texas provides. Strong infrastructure, cost efficiency, and the ability to move quickly from planning to opening allow companies to operate more effectively and scale with confidence. 

Walmart points directly to those advantages, citing “infrastructure, cost competitiveness, and speed to market” as key reasons Texas continues to support its growth.  

The state’s central location further strengthens that position, creating a clear logistics advantage and making it easier to reach customers and manage supply chains across the country. 

A Place Where Innovation Moves Forward 

Texas is not just supporting today’s operations. It is helping companies build what comes next. 

Plug and Play, a global innovation platform, has made Texas a core part of its North American strategy. With operations across multiple regions, the organization is working with corporations, startups, and public partners to turn new ideas into real-world solutions. 

What distinguishes Texas is how quickly that work can happen. Companies can launch programs, test technologies, and scale partnerships without the delays that often slow progress in other markets.

As the organization notes, “Texas offers the infrastructure, talent, and leadership alignment needed to move from idea to implementation faster than most regions.”

That speed is reinforced by something less tangible but equally important: alignment. Economic development organizations, universities, and industry leaders are working toward shared goals, creating an environment where innovation is not only encouraged, but actively advanced. There is a shared willingness to partner, solve problems, and move forward with momentum. 

Built to Support High-Growth Industries 

For companies in research-intensive sectors, long-term growth depends on more than opportunity. It requires the right environment to scale. 

Natera’s experience in Texas reflects that reality. After relocating its headquarters to Austin, the company has grown into a global leader in cell-free DNA and precision medicine, now employing more than 1,600 Texans, expanding high-capacity laboratory operations, and transforming standards of care in oncology and other genetic testing. 

The company continues to invest in that growth. A recent $45 million expansion will increase its ability to meet global demand while creating hundreds of new jobs. That investment reflects a clear pattern: Texas consistently meets the benchmarks that matter most, including workforce availability, infrastructure, and a supportive business climate 

For industries where innovation and speed are critical, those factors are not optional. They are essential. 

A Business Environment That Delivers 

While each company operates differently, the reasons they succeed in Texas are remarkably consistent. 

They point to a deep and growing workforceinfrastructure that keeps pace with demand, and a regulatory environment that supports progress rather than slowing it down. Just as important is the overall mindset. There is a shared commitment to growth and a willingness to work together to make projects happen. 

This is what allows companies to move from strategy to execution more efficiently. 

Positioned for What’s Next 

For executives and site selectors, Texas represents more than a strong entry point. It offers a long runway for growth. 

Companies are not simply entering the state. They are expanding within it, reinvesting in their operations, and using Texas as a foundation for broader national and global strategies. Whether the goal is to grow a workforce, scale production, or advance new technologies, the conditions are in place to support that next phase. 

As TxEDC investor, Natera, summarized it, “We choose Texas because it combines top talent, a pro-growth business climate, and the infrastructure to scale innovation.”

The Bottom Line

For organizations considering their next move, the question is not whether Texas is growing. It is whether your business is positioned to grow with it. 

Because in Texas, success is not theoretical. It is already happening. 

If your organization is evaluating your next moveTexas offers a proven environment to do it with many companies already scaling here. 

Walmart Superstore aerial view with surrounding parking lot

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