Pueblo County, CO
Property Data

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

Total Properties

119,779

Average Home Price

$293,949

Average Square Feet

1,561

Price per Sq Ft

$221

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
5620,103

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

119,779

Median Home Price

$283,000

Average Home Price

$293,949

Average Square Feet

1,561

Price per Sq Ft

$221

Recent Sales (12mo)

1,820

YoY Price Change

-7.1%

Sales Velocity

74.8%

Pueblo County, Colorado: The Affordable Outlier in a Pricey State

Colorado is synonymous with ski resorts, tech campuses, and six-figure home prices. Pueblo, sitting at the confluence of the Arkansas River and Fountain Creek on the eastern edge of the Front Range, has always played by different rules. While Denver metro homes routinely exceed $550,000 and Boulder pushes past $800,000, Pueblo County's median home price sits at $288,000 — making it one of the most genuinely affordable markets in a state that forgot what affordability feels like. That distinction is both an opportunity and a symptom of deeper structural challenges.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Value$271,800vs. $320,000 national median
Rent Burden Rate49.0%well above 30% threshold
Homeownership Rate68.3%above national avg of ~64%
YoY Price Change-1.7%declining while Colorado holds flat

A Working-Class City in a Boom State

Pueblo's identity was forged in steel — literally. CF&I Steel (later EVRAZ Rocky Mountain Steel) defined the city's economy for over a century, and the physical and demographic legacy of that industrial era is still visible in the data. The median household income of $62,250 runs about 17% below the national figure, labor force participation is a notably low 55.3%, and nearly one in five residents lives with a disability — a rate that stands out even in blue-collar communities nationally. These aren't anomalies; they're the fingerprints of a post-industrial city still in transition.

The poverty picture is sobering. A 15.4% overall poverty rate is concerning enough, but the child poverty rate of 19.3% suggests generational economic stress. One in five households relies on SNAP benefits. Yet paradoxically, homeownership sits at 68.3% — above the national average — because homes here are actually attainable on modest incomes. The price-to-income ratio comes in around 4.6x, still elevated but far more manageable than Denver's 7x+ or the national benchmark for high-cost metros.

The Rent Burden Paradox

Here's what's genuinely alarming: despite some of Colorado's lowest home prices, renters in Pueblo County are being crushed. The median rent of $1,059 may sound reasonable, but against local incomes it creates a rent burden rate of 49% — meaning the typical renter household spends nearly half its income on housing. More than a quarter of renters (26.7%) are severely rent-burdened, exceeding 50% of income. This suggests that the county's renter population skews toward lower-wage earners who are caught in a painful middle ground — unable to qualify for ownership, but not earning enough to make even modest rents comfortable.

Demographic Headwinds and Emerging Tailwinds

With a median age of 40.4 and nearly one in five residents over 65, Pueblo has an aging population that will reshape healthcare demand, housing preferences, and public service needs over the coming decade. The 11.1% of households without internet access is another structural concern — and a competitive disadvantage as remote work reshapes where people choose to live.

That remote work angle, however, is arguably Pueblo's biggest untapped opportunity. The same affordability that reflects decades of disinvestment is now a genuine draw for remote workers priced out of Denver and Colorado Springs. The -1.7% year-over-year price decline may indicate a market digesting that influx — or it may signal that the remote work migration wave hasn't fully arrived yet.


What makes Pueblo County unique? Pueblo is one of the few counties in Colorado where working-class homeownership remains genuinely achievable. Its industrial heritage, arts scene (Pueblo is home to the Sangre de Cristo Arts Center and has cultivated a surprising creative economy), and proximity to outdoor recreation create a value proposition that's hard to find anywhere else on the Front Range.

Is Pueblo a good place to invest in real estate right now? The -1.7% price decline and high rent burden suggest a market under some stress, but entry prices in the $80K–$480K range offer significant spread for investors with different risk tolerances. The critical question is whether Pueblo can attract enough income growth to sustain rental demand — the underlying demographics remain a constraint.

Why is poverty high in Pueblo despite relatively affordable housing? Pueblo's economy never fully diversified after steel industry contraction in the late 20th century. Lower educational attainment (just 16.2% hold bachelor's degrees, well below Colorado's ~43% statewide figure) and persistently higher unemployment create a structural income gap that affordable housing alone can't resolve.

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