You might be able to tell by our frequent traffic, but Austin is one of the most car-dependent large Texas cities. While Fort Worth claims the top spot, the Capital City is tailgating on that ranking.

In another lane are Dallas, San Antonio, and Houston, which boast a surprising number of car-free citizens.

A CultureMap review of estimates for 2011-15 from the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey shows only 6.6 percent of households in Austin didn't have vehicles during that period. Here are the 2011-15 figures for all five major cities in Texas:

10.1 percent of households in Dallas didn't have vehicles

9 percent of households in San Antonio didn't have vehicles

9.3 percent of households in Houston didn't have vehicles

6.6 percent of households in Austin didn't have vehicles

6.5 percent of households in Fort Worth didn't have vehicles

One explanation for Dallas’ standing as the top car-free big city in Texas is its AllTransit score from the Center for Neighborhood Technology. The score measures a city’s public transit connectivity, access, and frequency.

Dallas has the highest AllTransit score — 6.8 — among the state's five major cities. Next is Houston, with a score of 6.2, followed by San Antonio at 5.7, Austin at 5.5, and Fort Worth at 3.1.

Interestingly, Austin is the only Texas city that appears on the Money Crashers personal finance blog's ranking of the 10 best U.S. cities to live without a car. In naming Austin to the list, the blog cited Austin's bike-friendly culture, bus system, commuter rail system, and presence of pedicabs.

Going even further, the U.S. PIRG Education Fund and the Frontier Group think tank in 2015 declared Austin was the No. 1 city for leading "full and engaged lives without owning a car." The groups took into account the availability of car-sharing, rail-hailing, bike-sharing, and other tech-oriented transportation services.

"Expanding the availability of shared-use transportation modes and other technology-enabled tools can give more Americans the freedom to live 'car-free' or 'car-light' lifestyles — avoiding the cost of owning, insuring, maintaining, and garaging a private vehicle," the groups wrote in a report.

"Even when these services provide access to a car, they still make it easier for Americans to reduce their auto dependence by enabling easy access to a vehicle without the constant use associated with ownership."