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Georgetown Butcher Tejas Meat Supply Plots Taylor Main Street Takeover

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Published on April 11, 2026
Georgetown Butcher Tejas Meat Supply Plots Taylor Main Street TakeoverSource: Tejas Meat Supply

Tejas Meat Supply, the Georgetown butcher-to-table favorite, appears to be lining up a downtown Taylor outpost at 221 N Main Street, according to a recent state filing. The record spells out roughly $350,000 in planned work to remodel an existing restaurant space, adding a bar and service counter along with dining furniture and kitchen equipment, with construction slated to run from June 15 through Sept. 11. If the plan moves forward, it would stretch the brand’s footprint across more of Williamson County after a recent Round Rock opening.

What the filing shows

According to Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation records, first noted by What Now, the project is described as a "remodel of an existing restaurant space" with an estimated price tag of $350,000. The application lists June 15 as the start date and Sept. 11 as the completion date, and it calls for a new bar, service counter, and kitchen equipment as part of the buildout.

Tejas' menu and 'coming soon' note

Per Tejas Meat Supply, the concept pairs a full butcher counter with a dine-in menu focused on fresh-cut Texas meats, house-made sausages, jerky, and charcuterie. The company’s locations page already lists "Downtown Taylor (Coming soon!)" alongside its existing spots, while the Georgetown flagship at 101 E. Seventh St. remains the brand’s base and template for future openings.

Round Rock expansion gives context

Hoodline previously reported plans for a Round Rock outpost at 3001 Joe DiMaggio Blvd., and local coverage indicates that the Round Rock shop opened in mid-March. That move into a busy visitor corridor near Kalahari and the Dell Diamond suggests Tejas is eyeing high-traffic destinations as it grows beyond its Georgetown roots.

The Main Street space looks ready

Commercial listings for 219–221 N. Main describe a historic, multi-tenant storefront with a built-out bar and restaurant shell, a setup that could help shorten fit-out timelines for a new operator. LoopNet's marketing materials highlight the building's downtown visibility and restaurant-ready layout, details that line up neatly with the project scope in the state filing.

What to watch next

Neither Tejas nor local officials have rolled out a formal announcement beyond the registration, and What Now notes that the TDLR record remains the clearest public sign so far that Tejas plans to move into Taylor. For now, the next clues are likely to show up in permit postings, local filings and the company’s own channels, with Tejas directing followers to its Instagram for updates and staffing information.