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Teller County sits at roughly 9,000 feet in Colorado's Front Range, cradling Cripple Creek's storied gold-rush past and the ponderosa-pine ridgelines that draw retirees and remote workers alike. On the surface, the numbers suggest comfortable prosperity: household incomes above the national median, near-universal car ownership, an 82% homeownership rate that most urban counties would envy. But dig a little deeper and Teller reveals something more complicated — a mountain community quietly aging out, with a rental market under serious strain and a housing stock that's thinning faster than its population.
The median age of 52 is the number that explains almost everything else here. Nearly a quarter of residents are 65 or older, while just 16% are under 18 — a demographic hourglass that reflects Teller's identity as a destination for semi-retirees and older remote workers who cashed out of Denver, Colorado Springs, or the Front Range suburbs over the past decade. The 15.8% work-from-home rate — well above the national average — reinforces this picture: Teller isn't a commuter county, it's a lifestyle county, attracting people who no longer need to be near an office.
That aging ownership class has largely locked in equity. The 82.2% homeownership rate is exceptional, running nearly 30 points above the national norm. But it also means the rental market is tiny, underdeveloped, and under enormous pressure.
Here's the sharpest tension in the data: in a county that's overwhelmingly owner-occupied, the 17.8% of residents who do rent are getting squeezed hard. Median rent of $1,746 against a median household income of $80,666 implies a rent burden of roughly 26% — but the actual reported rent burden sits at 49.6%, with 26.6% of renters in severe burden territory (spending more than 50% of income on housing). That gap suggests Teller's renters skew significantly lower-income than the county median, likely service workers, casino employees from Cripple Creek, and younger households who haven't been able to buy in.
With a 16.7% vacancy rate that sounds generous but largely reflects seasonal and second-home inventory rather than available rentals, the rental pipeline is effectively frozen.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $480,000 | 6.0x median household income |
| Homeownership Rate | 82.2% | nearly 30 pts above national avg |
| Severe Rent Burden | 26.6% | over 1 in 4 renters |
| YoY Price Change | -1.0% | first cooling after pandemic surge |
After the pandemic-era land rush that pushed mountain Colorado counties to record valuations, Teller is registering a modest 1% year-over-year price decline — the first cooling signal in years. With 506 sales in the last twelve months against a total of 13,516 housing units, turnover is thin. The wide gap between P10 ($230K) and P90 ($820K) prices tells the real story: Teller has two completely different housing markets coexisting on the same mountain — modest cabins and modest manufactured homes on one end, custom builds and hobby-ranch retreats on the other.
What makes Teller County unique as a real estate market? Teller is one of the few Colorado counties where the homeownership rate exceeds 80%, largely because it functions as a retirement and lifestyle destination rather than a workforce hub. Its combination of mountain scenery, proximity to Colorado Springs (about 45 minutes), and a relatively lower price point than Summit or Eagle counties made it a pandemic-era magnet — though that surge is now showing early signs of cooling.
Is Teller County affordable compared to other Colorado mountain counties? Relatively speaking, yes — a median home price around $480,000 is well below the $700K–$1M+ medians seen in Pitkin, Summit, or San Miguel counties. But at roughly 6x the local median income, affordability is still strained by any objective standard. The county works best financially for buyers arriving with equity from elsewhere, not for first-time buyers trying to enter from within.
Why is the disability rate in Teller County so high? At 13.6%, Teller's disability rate runs above the state average and reflects its older demographic profile directly. An aging population with a median age of 52 and nearly a quarter of residents over 65 will naturally carry higher disability rates — this is less a sign of economic distress than a statistical consequence of being a retirement-skewed community.
Teller County has 35,246 properties in our comprehensive database.
Properties in Teller County average $525,613, reflecting a competitive market.
The price per square foot of $322 reflects strong property valuations in this area.
The average home price in Teller County, CO is $525,613, based on analysis of 35,246 properties in our database.
Our database includes 35,246 properties in Teller County, CO, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Teller County, CO is $322. This is calculated from an average home price of $525,613 and average size of 1,631 square feet.
Homes in Teller County, CO average 1,631 square feet, with an average price of $525,613.
Teller 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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