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Routt County, Colorado, is not your typical rural mountain county. With a median home price of $975,000 and an average that balloons to $1.33 million, this is one of the most expensive patches of land in the American interior — and the reasons are hiding in plain sight. Steamboat Springs, the county seat, is a world-class ski destination that has spent decades quietly attracting a wealthier, more remote-work-capable resident than its laid-back cowboy culture might suggest. The collision of that identity — "Ski Town, USA" meets working ranch country — produces some of the most fascinating real estate dynamics in the Mountain West.
The single most revealing number here is the vacancy rate: 37.2%. More than one in three housing units sits empty for much of the year. That's not a sign of economic distress — poverty sits at a low 6.4%, unemployment at a near-frictionless 2.5% — it's a sign that a significant portion of Routt County's housing stock functions as a second-home and vacation rental portfolio, not a primary residential market. Owners in Aspen, Denver, Houston, and beyond hold properties here the way others hold financial instruments. This has a cascading effect on affordability for the people who actually live and work here year-round.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $975,000 | ~3x Colorado state median |
| Vacancy Rate | 37.2% | vs ~11% national average |
| Rent Burden | 48.0% | well above 30% threshold |
| Price-to-Income Ratio | 9.3x | vs ~4x national benchmark |
The income numbers look impressive on paper — median household income at $104,803 is nearly 40% above the national figure — but they mask a brutal affordability gap. A price-to-income ratio of 9.3x means even solidly middle-class earners can't access ownership in a county where half the homes are single-family and 75.9% of occupied units are owner-occupied. Those owners largely got in before the post-pandemic surge. The renters left behind face a median rent of $1,845 with 48% of renters rent-burdened and nearly a quarter severely so — a crisis-level figure in a county this small. The mountain resort economy creates this paradox everywhere: the hospitality and service workers who make ski towns function increasingly cannot afford to live in them.
The 18.5% work-from-home rate — well above national norms — reflects a deliberate migration of high earners who discovered Steamboat Springs during the pandemic and never fully left. This has compressed the local job market and inflated the Gini coefficient to 0.475, a level of income inequality more commonly associated with large metros. A child poverty rate of just 3.6% alongside an uninsured rate of 8.0% tells a similar bifurcated story: families with means are doing exceptionally well, while the working class underneath the ski lifts operates without a safety net.
What makes Routt County unique in Colorado's real estate market? Routt County combines a genuine working-ranching identity with a top-tier ski resort economy in Steamboat Springs — producing a housing market where second-home demand from out-of-state wealth competes directly with local workforce needs. The result is a 37% vacancy rate and a price-to-income ratio nearly 2.5x the national benchmark, even as unemployment barely registers.
Is Steamboat Springs more or less expensive than other Colorado ski towns? Routt County sits in the second tier below Pitkin County (Aspen) and Summit County (Breckenridge) by average price, but it's closing the gap fast. Its average home price of $1.33 million and year-over-year stability (+0.5%) suggest the market is maturing into a permanent luxury tier rather than bouncing through boom-bust cycles.
Can service workers afford to live in Routt County? Increasingly, no — and it's a crisis local government is actively grappling with. Nearly a quarter of renters are severely rent-burdened, and the county's extremely low vacancy rate among long-term rentals means competition for any available workforce housing is intense. Several deed-restricted affordable housing developments have been proposed or built near Steamboat Springs to address the gap.
Routt County has 26,804 properties in our comprehensive database.
The average home price of $1.3M positions Routt County as a premium real estate market.
At $652/sq ft, property values here are significantly above national averages.
Home prices in Routt County are 99% higher than the Colorado average.
| Metric | Routt County | Colorado Avg | vs State |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $1,340,143 | $674,458 | +99% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 2,054 | 1,778 | +16% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $652 | $379 | +72% |
| Properties | 26,804 | 3,132,192 | -99% |
Based on property sales data from the last 18 months
The average home price in Routt County, CO is $1,340,143, based on analysis of 26,804 properties in our database.
Our database includes 26,804 properties in Routt County, CO, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Routt County, CO is $652. This is calculated from an average home price of $1,340,143 and average size of 2,054 square feet.
Homes in Routt County, CO average 2,054 square feet, with an average price of $1,340,143.
Routt County, CO is one of 64 counties in Colorado with property data available. Browse other counties to compare market conditions and pricing.
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