Norphlet, AR 71759
Union County
05420-00018-0000
33.316085, -92.662513
County context
There's a peculiar tension at the heart of Union County. Named for its role as a geographic crossroads in southern Arkansas, the county seat of El Dorado was once literally swimming in oil — the 1920s discovery of the Smackover Formation made it one of America's great petroleum boomtowns, a place where roughnecks became millionaires overnight. A century later, the county carries both the inheritance and the hangover of that era: deeply affordable housing, a mature median age, and income inequality striking enough to rival major metropolitan areas.
That Gini coefficient of 0.504 is the number that stops you cold. For context, the U.S. national average hovers around 0.49 — itself considered high by global standards. Union County exceeds it, suggesting a community where prosperity and poverty live in unusually close proximity. A 19.4% poverty rate alongside a $50,221 median household income tells the same story: this is not a uniformly struggling economy, but a bifurcated one.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Value | $114,700 | Less than 36% of the national median |
| Homeownership Rate | 72.9% | Well above the national average of ~65% |
| Income-to-Price Ratio | ~2.3x | Extraordinarily affordable vs. 4x national benchmark |
| YoY Price Change | +14.6% | Sharp appreciation from a low base |
At $103 per square foot and a median home price of $165,750, Union County offers something increasingly rare in post-pandemic America: genuine affordability with real square footage. The average home runs nearly 1,861 square feet — not a starter apartment but a full family home — and the income-to-price ratio sits at roughly 2.3x, less than half the national benchmark. For buyers priced out of larger markets, this is the kind of math that prompts relocation spreadsheets.
That 14.6% year-over-year price appreciation reflects exactly this dynamic. Demand from cost-refugees, combined with a thin inventory of just 10 recent sales recorded, means modest transaction volumes can move percentages dramatically. The spread between the 10th percentile ($69,550) and 90th percentile ($359,000) also signals a true two-tier market — distressed or rural properties at the low end, and executive-level homes likely tied to energy or medical sector professionals at the upper range.
Yet affordability at the purchase level doesn't translate uniformly. Renters — 27.1% of occupied households — face a median rent of $825 against incomes that, for many, fall well below the county median. A 38.5% rent burden rate (above the 30% threshold considered financially stressful) and a severe rent burden rate of 18.5% reveal that for a significant share of Union County residents, housing costs are genuinely crushing. The 19% vacancy rate — unusually high — suggests some properties may simply be uninhabitable or too deteriorated to attract tenants, rather than indicating market slack.
The labor force participation rate of 55.8% is also worth noting: well below the national figure, it reflects an older population (median age 41.5, with nearly 19% aged 65+) alongside disability rates that track elevated poverty.
FAQs
What makes Union County, Arkansas unique in real estate terms? Union County offers some of the most affordable owned housing stock in the American South, with prices that have historically been suppressed by oil-era housing surpluses and population decline. The recent double-digit appreciation suggests outside buyers are starting to notice — but values remain a fraction of national norms, making it a genuine outlier for those seeking ownership on modest incomes.
Is El Dorado, Arkansas a good place to buy a home right now? For buyers who can tolerate a small-city lifestyle and limited amenities, the math is hard to argue with. Prices are appreciating quickly from a very low base, homeownership rates are high, and the income-to-price ratio is among the most favorable in the country. The risk is that the local economy remains heavily tied to energy sector cycles, and the high vacancy rate signals some structural housing challenges that won't resolve quickly.
Why is income inequality so high in Union County? The legacy of the oil industry created a durable economic hierarchy — engineers, lawyers, and executives on one tier; service and extraction workers on another — without the middle-class broadening that manufacturing or tech growth can produce. That pattern persists today, reflected in a Gini coefficient that rivals some of America's most unequal urban areas.
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