The Ritz-Carlton Residences Houston closed $203 million in presales within four months of launch, before the 45-story tower breaks ground this summer along Post Oak Boulevard in Uptown.
The 600-foot tower has not poured concrete. Developers announced the presale threshold in early May, marking one of the fastest absorptions for a branded-residence project in a U.S. market outside the coastal gateway quintet. Houston's previous single-residence price record stands at $12.5 million, set in River Oaks in 2019. The Ritz-Carlton Residences project pencils units at $15 million to $18 million for upper-floor penthouses, according to offering materials reviewed by brokers briefed on the launch. The $203 million figure implies roughly 15 to 18 closings at average sale prices near $11 million to $13 million, assuming a mix of mid-tier and penthouse inventory. Groundbreaking is scheduled for July 2026, with delivery targeted for Q4 2029.
This matters because Houston is not Miami, and Houston is not Manhattan. The city's single-family-dominated luxury market has historically resisted vertical density above $5 million per unit. The Ritz-Carlton presale velocity suggests three shifts: international capital treating Houston as a portfolio hedge against coastal concentration risk, family-office principals aged 45 to 65 seeking lock-and-leave pied-à-terre inventory near Texas Medical Center and Galleria employment nodes, and brand-driven underwriting displacing location-driven underwriting in markets where developers previously could not justify $2,000-per-square-foot basis. Marriott International's Ritz-Carlton franchise collects roughly 4% to 6% of gross sales as brand fees, plus annual operating assessments. The $203 million presale translates to $8 million to $12 million in upfront brand economics before the tower opens, a model now being studied by competing franchisors for Dallas, Austin, and Nashville.
Operators should watch three follow-on events. First, whether the developer syndicate—led by local groups with prior Uptown land assemblage—brings in a institutional equity partner by Q3 2026 to derisk construction financing, a common move once presales cross 20% of total inventory. Second, whether Marriott announces additional Ritz-Carlton Residence licenses in secondary Sun Belt markets before year-end, using Houston's velocity as proof of concept. Third, whether Houston's existing ultra-luxury inventory—specifically River Oaks estates listed above $10 million—sees price compression as vertical alternatives capture allocator attention. Brokers report four River Oaks listings above $15 million have sat for more than 18 months.
The tower's construction loan will likely require presales to reach $275 million to $300 million before first concrete, standard for projects with $400 million to $450 million all-in costs. Developers have not disclosed that threshold publicly.