Shasta County, CA
Property Data

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

Total Properties

116,857

Average Home Price

$374,771

Average Square Feet

1,712

Price per Sq Ft

$241

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

Loading map...
Total Properties
47623,024

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

116,857

Median Home Price

$350,000

Average Home Price

$374,771

Average Square Feet

1,712

Price per Sq Ft

$241

Recent Sales (12mo)

1,755

YoY Price Change

3.5%

Sales Velocity

77.3%

Redding's Shadow: The Surprising Housing Story in California's Forgotten North

Shasta County doesn't get the attention that the Bay Area or Los Angeles command, but that relative obscurity is precisely what makes its housing market worth examining. Anchored by Redding — a city more famous for the Sundial Bridge and gateway access to Mt. Shasta than for tech booms or luxury condos — this sprawling, sparsely populated county (just 48 people per square mile) is experiencing a quiet but meaningful appreciation cycle that challenges assumptions about rural California.

Homes here are selling for a median of $350,000, a price that looks almost quaint compared to coastal California, yet sits meaningfully above the national median. And those prices are rising at 6.2% year-over-year — the same rate that, on the coast, would barely register as news, but in a county where median household income trails the national benchmark by several thousand dollars, tells a more complicated story.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Value$350,0009% above national median, but just 39% of CA state median
Rent Burden Rate47.2%Far above the 30% healthy threshold
Homeownership Rate65.4%Above national average of ~65%, unusually high for CA
YoY Price Change+6.2%Outpacing income growth in a lower-wage market

The Affordability Paradox

On paper, Shasta County looks like a refuge from California's housing crisis. At roughly 4.9x income, the price-to-income ratio is nowhere near the double-digit multiples strangling San Francisco or Los Angeles. Yet nearly one in four renters here is severely rent-burdened — spending more than half their income on housing. How can homes be "affordable" by California standards while renters are drowning?

The answer lies in the income floor. Shasta County has a high homeownership rate (65.4%, remarkable for California where the statewide rate hovers near 55%) but a notably low labor force participation rate of just 55.9%. Combined with a disability rate of 18.2% — well above national norms — and over 21% of residents aged 65 or older, the county's renter population skews toward fixed-income households for whom even a $1,267 median rent is punishing. SNAP participation at 12.8% underscores that the gap between property values and economic reality is real and deepening.

Who's Arriving, and Why

Shasta County has quietly benefited from California's internal migration wave. Remote workers and retirees priced out of Sacramento and the Bay Area discovered that $350,000 buys a genuine single-family home here — and 70.2% of the housing stock is exactly that. The county's broadband access rate of 89.5%, while not exceptional, is sufficient for remote work, and the 8.6% work-from-home rate reflects that shift. The wildfire years of 2018-2021 rattled confidence in the region, but the continued price appreciation suggests those concerns have been overridden by the relentless math of California affordability.

The bottom of the market is also worth watching: a P10 price of $120,000 means entry-level ownership remains genuinely accessible here — something almost no other California county can claim.

FAQs

What makes Shasta County unique in California's real estate market? It's one of the few California counties where homeownership is above the national average, prices remain under $400,000, and single-family homes dominate the stock — a combination that has made it an increasingly attractive landing spot for inland migration from costlier metros.

Is Shasta County affordable for renters? Despite relatively modest home prices, renters in Shasta County face serious stress: the rent burden rate of 47.2% far exceeds the 30% threshold considered healthy, and nearly a quarter of renters are severely rent-burdened. Low wages and fixed incomes mean rental affordability lags well behind ownership affordability.

Is the Shasta County housing market still growing? Yes — 6.2% annual appreciation and 1,317 sales over the past 12 months suggest a market with real transaction volume and continued upward price pressure, driven by out-of-area buyers and constrained new construction in this geographically varied, fire-risk-adjacent landscape.

More Counties in California

Access Shasta County, CA Property Data Through Our Enterprise API

Get instant access to comprehensive county assessors-based property data with your free API key

Need Bulk Data?

Email us at hello@realie.ai