Nevada County, CA
Property Data

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

Total Properties

71,260

Average Home Price

$736,357

Average Square Feet

1,999

Price per Sq Ft

$343

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
429,549

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

71,260

Median Home Price

$561,000

Average Home Price

$736,357

Average Square Feet

1,999

Price per Sq Ft

$343

Recent Sales (12mo)

1,608

YoY Price Change

6.0%

Sales Velocity

106.7%

Nevada County, California: Where Ski Town Prices Meet Gold Rush Roots

There's a reason Nevada County feels like it exists slightly outside the normal California real estate calculus. Tucked into the western Sierra Nevada foothills between Sacramento and Lake Tahoe, this is a county of two distinct worlds: the historic Gold Rush towns of Grass Valley and Nevada City on one end, and the ski resort gravity of Truckee and Donner Summit on the other. That duality — working-class mountain community meets premium recreation destination — explains nearly everything unusual about its housing market.

The 10.5% year-over-year price appreciation is the headline number, but the real story is who is driving it. Nevada County's median age of 50.3 years is dramatically older than California's statewide median of around 38, and nearly 29% of residents are 65 or older. This is retirement country — and pandemic-era remote work turbocharged it. With 22.1% of the labor force working from home (nearly double the national rate), the county absorbed a wave of Bay Area and Sacramento transplants who could suddenly afford to live where they'd previously only vacationed.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Value$602,800~1.9x national average
Homeownership Rate74.4%well above CA avg of ~55%
YoY Price Change+10.5%nearly double national appreciation pace
Rent Burden Rate53.2%far above the 30% healthy threshold

The Vacancy Paradox

A 22.4% vacancy rate would signal distress in most markets. Here it tells a different story: this county has a substantial inventory of second homes and seasonal properties, particularly in the Truckee corridor. Those vacant units aren't abandoned — they're sitting empty between ski weekends and summer lake visits. The practical effect is cruel for long-term renters. With so much housing stock locked up in part-time use, the rental supply squeezes, and a $1,635 median rent on a regional income base produces a rent burden rate of 53.2% — a number that should alarm policymakers. Nearly a third of renters are severely cost-burdened.

The 74.4% homeownership rate looks healthy on its surface — and it is, for owners. But the flip side is that the 25.6% who rent are caught in a market shaped by and for people wealthier than themselves.

Education, Connectivity, and the Remote Work Premium

With 39.5% of residents holding a bachelor's or graduate degree and 91.8% broadband penetration, Nevada County has quietly built the infrastructure profile of a knowledge-economy suburb. That 96.4% computer access rate — in a rural county with 107 people per square mile — reflects the deliberate investment this community has made to attract remote workers. It's working, with consequences. Labor force participation at 53.3% is low, consistent with a large retiree population, which means the housing demand is heavily driven by wealth accumulation rather than local wages.

The price-to-income ratio of roughly 7x median home value to median income is unsustainable for locally-employed workers — teachers, nurses, tradespeople — who form the invisible backbone of any mountain resort economy.

FAQs

What makes Nevada County unique as a real estate market? Nevada County sits at the intersection of Sierra Nevada retirement destination, outdoor recreation hub, and remote-work haven. Its unusually high homeownership rate, aging population, and enormous second-home vacancy pool create market dynamics more similar to a resort county like Tahoe or Mammoth than a typical California suburban market. Prices are being set by out-of-area wealth, not local wages.

Is Nevada County, CA a good place to buy a home right now? For buyers with equity or remote income from high-cost metros, Nevada County offers genuine lifestyle value compared to Bay Area prices. For first-time buyers dependent on local salaries, the 7x price-to-income ratio and limited entry-level inventory make purchase increasingly difficult. The P10 price floor of $205,000 suggests some affordable product exists, but it competes against a top decile reaching $1.35 million — an unusually wide spread that reflects the county's economic stratification.

Why are rents so high in Nevada County given its rural character? The 22.4% vacancy rate is misleading — most of those empty units are seasonal second homes not available to renters. That effectively removes a large share of the housing stock from the long-term rental market, concentrating demand on a narrow inventory and pushing rents to levels that burden more than half of all renter households.

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