Denver County, CO
Property Data

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

Total Properties

243,897

Average Home Price

$741,956

Average Square Feet

1,772

Price per Sq Ft

$451

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
118,227

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

243,897

Median Home Price

$585,000

Average Home Price

$741,956

Average Square Feet

1,772

Price per Sq Ft

$451

Recent Sales (12mo)

6,732

YoY Price Change

-3.3%

Sales Velocity

62.1%

Denver County: The Mile High Price Tag

Denver's housing market is experiencing something rare in the post-pandemic West: a full stop. After years of frenzied appreciation that turned a gritty, lovable cowtown into one of America's most expensive metros, Denver County's year-over-year price change has landed at exactly 0.0%. The boom, for now, is paused — and what it's left behind reveals a city caught between its aspirational identity and the economic reality of who can actually afford to live here.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$585,0006.4x median household income — 60% above national affordability benchmark
Homeownership Rate49.1%Majority-renter city; well below Colorado's ~66% statewide rate
Severe Rent Burden21.4%Over 1 in 5 renters spending 50%+ of income on housing
Rent Burden Rate45.6%Nearly half of renters are cost-burdened, vs. 30% threshold

A Majority-Renter City in a Homeownership State

Denver County is now a majority-renter jurisdiction — 50.9% of occupied units are rented — in a state where roughly two-thirds of households own their homes. That inversion isn't accidental. Only 41.2% of the county's housing stock is single-family homes, a figure that reflects decades of dense infill development in neighborhoods like RiNo, Five Points, and the former industrial corridors along the South Platte. The city built apartments; it just didn't build them cheaply enough. At a median rent of $1,770 and a rent burden rate of 45.6%, the renter majority is being squeezed in ways the city's progressive housing politics have so far struggled to address.

The child poverty rate of 14.7% — meaningfully higher than the overall poverty rate of 11.2% — signals where that squeeze lands hardest. Denver's prosperity is unevenly distributed, and the Gini index of 0.488 puts it among the more unequal large cities in the Mountain West.

The Freeze After the Fever

Between 2020 and 2023, Denver became a relocation magnet — tech workers from California, remote workers from the coasts, all chasing the outdoor lifestyle and (relatively) cheaper prices. Prices surged. Now, with interest rates elevated and that migration wave receding, the market has plateaued. The average home price of $731,810 against a median of $585,000 reveals a wide spread between the middle and the top of the market — the P90 price of nearly $1.3 million reflects Washington Park mansions and Cherry Creek new construction pulling the average up sharply.

An Educated, Young, Mobile Workforce

Denver's median age of 35.2 and labor force participation rate of 74.1% paint a picture of a young, professionally active city. More than 55% of adults hold at least a bachelor's degree — a figure that helps explain both the $91,681 median household income and the 24.4% work-from-home rate, one of the highest in the intermountain region. That remote-work penetration is a double-edged sword: it fueled demand during the boom, and it now means housing demand is more sensitive to national tech sector headwinds than in previous cycles.


FAQs

What makes Denver County unique in Colorado's real estate market? Denver County is the only major Colorado county where renters outnumber owners — a product of its urban density, housing typology, and years of price growth that have pushed homeownership out of reach for much of its workforce. Combined with a flat 2024 market and one of the highest rent burden rates in the state, it sits at a genuine housing crossroads.

Is Denver County's housing market affordable for local workers? Not by conventional measures. At a price-to-income ratio of roughly 6.4x, Denver far exceeds the ~4x national benchmark considered affordable. A household earning the county median would need to spend nearly all take-home pay to service a mortgage on a median-priced home at current interest rates — which is a key reason homeownership has slipped below 50%.

Why are so many Denver renters cost-burdened? The math is straightforward but painful: median rents of $1,770 require an annual income of about $71,000 to clear the 30% affordability threshold, yet a substantial share of Denver's workforce — in hospitality, healthcare support, education, and retail — earns far less. With over 21% of renters in severe burden (spending 50%+ on housing), the affordability crisis isn't a future concern. It's a present condition.

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