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There's a reason Baldwin County has been one of Alabama's fastest-growing counties for the better part of two decades. Sandwiched between Mobile Bay and the Gulf of Mexico, it offers something rare in the American South: beaches, relative affordability, and a quality of life that has steadily pulled retirees, remote workers, and families out of pricier coastal markets. The data tells the story of a county that has successfully marketed itself to the outside world — and is now wrestling with what that success costs the people who were already here.
The 26.4% vacancy rate is the number that jumps off the page. Nationally, vacancy rates hover around 10–12%; Baldwin County's figure is more than double that. This isn't a sign of economic distress — it's the fingerprint of a coastal resort economy. Gulf Shores, Orange Beach, and Perdido Key collectively host millions of visitors annually, and a significant portion of the county's housing stock exists to serve them as short-term rentals and second homes. That dynamic inflates the average sale price to $456,869 — a full $115,000 above the median — because vacation properties and waterfront estates skew the high end dramatically. The P10-to-P90 spread, from $140,000 to $849,000, captures just how bifurcated this market truly is.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $342,000 | Modest vs. peer coastal counties, but growing |
| Vacancy Rate | 26.4% | 2x+ national average — driven by second homes & STRs |
| Homeownership Rate | 77.5% | Well above national ~65%, reflecting retiree settlement |
| Rent Burden Rate | 41.8% | Far exceeds 30% threshold; renters squeezed by tourism economy |
A median age of 43.7 — several years above the national median of 38.9 — and a 65-plus population of 21.4% tell you that Baldwin County is, in meaningful ways, a retirement destination wearing a family-friendly costume. Homeownership at 77.5% reflects this: retirees tend to own, not rent, and many arrive with equity from costlier markets in the Midwest and Northeast. Labor force participation at just 58.0% reinforces the picture — a substantial share of residents simply aren't working because they don't need to.
Here's the tension hiding beneath the headline numbers. Renters — just 22.5% of occupied units — face a median rent of $1,211 against incomes that don't always match the coastal premium the market demands. A rent burden rate of 41.8% means the typical renter is spending well above the 30% affordability threshold, and 18.4% are severely cost-burdened. When vacation rental platforms compete for the same housing stock that workforce residents need, the math gets punishing fast.
FAQs
What makes Baldwin County unique in Alabama real estate? Baldwin County combines Gulf Coast tourism infrastructure with genuine suburban growth — it's the only Alabama county where second-home demand, retirement migration, and young-family relocation are all happening simultaneously, creating a market with unusual price dispersion and a vacancy rate that looks alarming on paper but is structurally explained by the short-term rental economy.
Is Baldwin County affordable to buy a home in? Relative to other Gulf Coast destinations — think Florida's Emerald Coast just across the state line — yes. A $342,000 median compares favorably to comparable markets in Destin or Panama City Beach. But for local earners at the county's $75,019 median income, the price-to-income ratio still runs above 4.5x, and the gap between beach-area and inland pricing means affordability depends enormously on which zip code you're targeting.
Is the Baldwin County housing market slowing down? Year-over-year price growth has cooled to just 0.5%, suggesting the post-pandemic frenzy that drove double-digit appreciation along Gulf Coast markets has largely exhausted itself. With nearly 3,844 sales in the past 12 months and a large overall housing inventory, buyers have more negotiating room than they've had in years — though waterfront and short-term-rental-eligible properties remain a different, more competitive story.
Baldwin County is one of the largest real estate markets with over 217,065 properties in our database.
With an average price of $457,457, Baldwin County offers mid-range housing options.
Buyers can expect to pay around $225 per square foot in this market.
Home prices in Baldwin County are 33% higher than the Alabama average.
| Metric | Baldwin County | Alabama Avg | vs State |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $457,457 | $343,827 | +33% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 2,029 | 1,874 | +8% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $225 | $183 | +23% |
| Properties | 217,065 | 4,129,817 | -95% |
Based on property sales data from the last 18 months
The average home price in Baldwin County, AL is $457,457, based on analysis of 217,065 properties in our database.
Our database includes 217,065 properties in Baldwin County, AL, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Baldwin County, AL is $225. This is calculated from an average home price of $457,457 and average size of 2,029 square feet.
Homes in Baldwin County, AL average 2,029 square feet, with an average price of $457,457.
Baldwin County, AL is one of 67 counties in Alabama with property data available. Browse other counties to compare market conditions and pricing.
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