Douglas County, CO
Property Data

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

Total Properties

171,239

Average Home Price

$827,014

Average Square Feet

2,518

Price per Sq Ft

$330

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

Loading map...
Total Properties
14137,955

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

171,239

Median Home Price

$715,000

Average Home Price

$827,014

Average Square Feet

2,518

Price per Sq Ft

$330

Recent Sales (12mo)

5,345

YoY Price Change

-4.8%

Sales Velocity

54.9%

Douglas County, Colorado: America's Affluent Suburb, With a Renter Paradox

Douglas County doesn't just sit at the top of Colorado's wealth rankings — it consistently ranks among the wealthiest counties in the entire United States. Wedged between Denver's sprawl and the rugged terrain of the Front Range foothills, it encompasses the master-planned communities of Highlands Ranch and Castle Rock, the latter now Douglas County's seat and one of Colorado's fastest-growing cities of the past decade. The data here doesn't describe a place in transition — it describes a place that has already arrived, and is now grappling with the quiet pressures that come with success.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Household Income$145,737Nearly 2x the national median of $75,149
Homeownership Rate77.8%Well above national avg of ~65%
Price-to-Income Ratio4.9xElevated but below Denver metro's worst
YoY Price Change-1.4%First meaningful correction after years of gains

The Wealth Baseline — and What It Masks

The headline numbers are striking. A median household income of nearly $146,000 — almost double the national figure — reflects a county deeply integrated into Denver's professional economy, with aerospace and defense contractors (Lockheed Martin has major operations nearby), financial services firms, and a large cohort of remote workers who have decamped from higher-cost metros to enjoy Colorado's outdoor lifestyle without sacrificing income. At 27.4%, Douglas County's work-from-home rate is exceptional, suggesting a workforce that doesn't need proximity to downtown Denver to maintain elite earnings.

The poverty rate of 3.2% — and a child poverty rate of just 2.4% — are figures that most counties in America can only dream about. Only 1.9% of households receive SNAP benefits. These aren't numbers; they're a portrait of concentrated economic security.

The Renter Paradox

Here is where the story gets genuinely surprising. Despite being one of the wealthiest counties in America, Douglas County has a rent burden rate of 48.8% — meaning nearly half of all renters spend more than 30% of their income on housing, the federal threshold for being "cost-burdened." More striking still: 21.7% face severe rent burden, spending over half their income on rent.

This is not what you'd expect in a county where the median household earns six figures. What it reveals is a tale of two Douglas Counties: the vast majority of residents (77.8%) are homeowners locked into appreciating assets, while the small renting minority — just 22.2% of households — faces median rents of $2,095 in a market with almost nothing affordable at their income level. There is essentially no affordable rental inventory, and the county has historically resisted high-density development. The renters here are largely service workers, young professionals waiting to buy, and households priced out of ownership in a market where even the 10th-percentile home costs $475,000.

A Mild Correction in an Otherwise Ascending Market

The -1.4% year-over-year price change is worth contextualizing. After the pandemic-era surge that pushed Douglas County values to record highs — fueled by remote workers fleeing California and in-migration from Denver proper — the market is cooling rather than crashing. With a vacancy rate of just 3.1% and 3,975 sales recorded in the past twelve months, there's no inventory glut. The median year built of 2002 reflects the county's relatively recent development, meaning most of the housing stock is modern and energy-efficient — a factor that supports price floors even in downturns.


FAQs

What makes Douglas County unique? Douglas County is one of America's rare combinations: genuinely high incomes, high homeownership, high education levels (61% of adults hold a bachelor's degree or higher), and very low poverty — all in a county with access to both metro Denver amenities and Rocky Mountain recreation. Its planned communities like Highlands Ranch set a national template for suburban development in the 1990s and 2000s. It is, in many ways, the archetype of the modern American affluent exurb.

Is Douglas County affordable for first-time homebuyers? In a word: barely. With a median home price of $708,000 and even entry-level homes starting around $475,000, first-time buyers need substantial income and savings. The price-to-income ratio of roughly 4.9x is better than many coastal markets but still well above the national benchmark of 4x — and requires a down payment most young households haven't accumulated. The county's renter paradox underscores the difficulty: once you're renting here, saving enough to buy becomes an uphill battle.

Why is the work-from-home rate so high in Douglas County? At 27.4%, Douglas County's remote work share significantly exceeds national norms, and it's no accident. The county attracted a wave of high-income remote workers during and after the pandemic who wanted Colorado's lifestyle without commuting into Denver daily. Its demographics — highly educated, employed in knowledge industries, with near-universal broadband access (97.7%) and computer ownership (98.9%) — make it a natural landing spot for the remote-first workforce. That dynamic now underpins much of the county's economic resilience.

More Counties in Colorado

Access Douglas County, CO 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