Craighead County, AR
Property Data

Explore accurate parcel and ownership records,
directly sourced from county assessors.

Total Properties

64,012

Average Home Price

$251,553

Average Square Feet

2,105

Price per Sq Ft

$136

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
7321,645

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

64,012

Median Home Price

$210,000

Average Home Price

$251,553

Average Square Feet

2,105

Price per Sq Ft

$136

Recent Sales (12mo)

1,212

YoY Price Change

4.8%

Sales Velocity

65.3%

Jonesboro's Orbit: How One Mid-South Hub Is Quietly Reshaping Northeast Arkansas

Craighead County doesn't often appear on national real estate radar, but it probably should. Home to Jonesboro — Arkansas's fourth-largest city and the undisputed economic engine of the Arkansas Delta's northern edge — the county is experiencing something genuinely uncommon for rural-adjacent Middle America: sustained housing appreciation without the coastal price tags that make ownership impossible.

A 6.3% year-over-year price gain in a market where the median home still sits at $205,000 is a combination that has all but vanished from most of the Sun Belt and the urban Midwest. At roughly $134 per square foot, buyers here get real square footage — nearly 1,850 on average — in homes that are, by national standards, practically new (median year built: 2011). The price-to-income ratio hovers around 3.6x, comfortably below the national benchmark of 4x, making Craighead one of the few growing counties left where a median-earning household can realistically afford a median-priced home.

The Jonesboro Effect

Arkansas State University anchors much of this dynamism. The university's ~14,000 students and expanding research footprint funnel a steady stream of young residents and professional hires into the county, which explains the notably young median age of 34.5 and school enrollment rate of 28.5%. The healthcare sector — led by St. Bernards Medical Center and NEA Baptist Memorial Hospital — is the other gravitational force, drawing regional medical workers and supporting the 19% disability rate that reflects both an older rural patient base and the employment it generates.

That employment engine, however, hasn't fully closed the gap on poverty. A 19.1% poverty rate and a child poverty rate of 27.7% sit well above national norms and signal a two-speed economy: professional and healthcare workers doing reasonably well, while a significant share of the population — particularly families — remains financially precarious.

The Rent Burden Problem Nobody's Talking About

Here's the number that should give pause: 46.8% of renters in Craighead County are rent-burdened, meaning they spend more than 30% of income on housing. Nearly a quarter — 23.3% — are severely burdened. In a market where the median rent is just $930, this isn't a supply-price problem so much as an income-floor problem. When a meaningful portion of households earns too little to afford even modestly priced rentals, appreciation that looks gentle by coastal standards can still destabilize local families.

The county's Gini index of 0.484 confirms what the rent burden numbers suggest: income inequality here is significant, edging toward levels more typical of major metros than mid-sized Southern counties.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$205,00036% below national median of $320,000
YoY Price Change+6.3%above national avg; sustained in affordable range
Severe Rent Burden23.3%nearly 1 in 4 renters paying 50%+ of income on rent
Child Poverty Rate27.7%nearly 3x the national childhood poverty benchmark

FAQs

What makes Craighead County unique in the Arkansas real estate market? Craighead County combines genuine affordability with above-average price growth — a pairing that's increasingly rare nationally. Jonesboro's role as a regional hub for healthcare, higher education, and retail services drives consistent demand, keeping the market active (over 1,000 sales in the past 12 months) without the speculative fever that has priced out buyers elsewhere.

Is Jonesboro / Craighead County a good place to invest in rental property? The fundamentals look attractive on paper — low vacancy at 9.6%, strong renter demand (40.8% of households rent), and rising prices — but the severe rent burden data is a caution flag. A large share of renters is already financially stretched at current rents, which caps how aggressively landlords can push rates without triggering turnover or vacancy spikes. Cash-flow investors may find opportunity; rent-maximization strategies face real human and economic limits here.

How does Craighead County's housing market compare to the rest of Arkansas? Arkansas itself is one of the nation's most affordable states, but Craighead outperforms most Arkansas counties on price growth and transaction volume. Its younger population, university presence, and healthcare job density give it a demand profile closer to a small metro than a traditional Delta county — which is precisely why its housing numbers are pulling away from many of its rural neighbors.

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