Glades County, FL
Property Data

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

Total Properties

13,445

Average Home Price

$212,516

Average Square Feet

1,533

Price per Sq Ft

$168

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
1,1545,332

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

13,445

Median Home Price

$176,000

Average Home Price

$212,516

Average Square Feet

1,533

Price per Sq Ft

$168

Recent Sales (12mo)

173

YoY Price Change

-23.0%

Sales Velocity

19.3%

Glades County, Florida: Affordable on Paper, Stretched in Practice

Glades County sits at the geographic heart of Florida — rimmed by Lake Okeechobee to the east, cane fields to the south, and cattle ranches stretching toward the horizon — yet it occupies the margins of nearly every economic measure in the state. With a population of just 12,324 spread across 774 square miles, this is one of Florida's least-known counties, and its housing data tells a story that defies the Sun Belt narrative of soaring prices and pandemic-era migration booms.

The Affordability Paradox

At first glance, Glades County looks like a buyer's dream: a median home value of $114,800 in a state where coastal markets routinely exceed $400,000. But dig into the income side of the ledger and the picture shifts. With a median household income of just $38,905 — roughly half the national median — the apparent affordability dissolves. The price-to-income ratio still sits at a manageable 2.9x, well below the national benchmark of 4x, but the real squeeze shows up in the rental market, where a median rent of $927 consumes a staggering 57% of median renter household income. More than a third of renters face severe rent burden, spending over half their income on housing. In a county without a single transit line to speak of (0.1% public transit use), there is virtually no escaping those costs.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Value$114,800Just 36% of the national median
Rent Burden57.0%Nearly 2x the 30% threshold considered unaffordable
Homeownership Rate79.7%Well above national average of ~65%
Vacancy Rate31.0%Among the highest in Florida

Who Actually Lives Here

The county's demographics reflect its agricultural economy and retirement appeal simultaneously. At a median age of 45.8 and with more than a quarter of residents over 65, Glades reads partly as a rural retirement destination — one without the resort amenities of Naples or Sarasota, but with rock-bottom land prices. The extraordinarily high homeownership rate of 79.7% makes sense in this context: many long-term residents own outright or carry minimal mortgages on modest properties.

Yet the child poverty rate of 28.6% signals a second, younger population living in much harder circumstances. With 27.6% of adults lacking a high school diploma and only 9.9% holding a bachelor's degree, educational attainment sits near the bottom of Florida's 67 counties. Labor force participation at just 39.1% — versus roughly 63% nationally — reflects the combined weight of an aging population, limited job diversity, and high disability rates (18.9%).

The Vacancy Puzzle

A 31% housing vacancy rate is extraordinary — more than triple the national average. This isn't distress vacancy; it largely reflects seasonal and recreational properties around Lake Okeechobee, used by fishing enthusiasts but sitting empty most of the year. That dynamic helps explain why rents remain elevated even in a deeply low-income county: the effective rental supply is far smaller than the raw housing stock suggests.


What makes Glades County unique? Glades County is Florida's least densely populated county and one of its most economically isolated, built around cattle ranching, sugarcane farming, and bass fishing on Lake Okeechobee rather than tourism or tech. It's a rare place in modern Florida where homes are still genuinely cheap in absolute terms — but where thin incomes and a razor-tight rental market make affordability elusive for working residents.

Why is the rent burden so high if homes are so cheap? The rental market in Glades County serves a small, captive population — there's no neighboring city to arbitrage against, no transit to expand the geographic options, and a large share of the housing stock is either owner-occupied or seasonally vacant. That structural tightness keeps rents surprisingly high relative to what local incomes can bear.

Is Glades County growing? Not meaningfully. The combination of limited broadband access (with 20.4% of residents having no internet), sparse services, and a 20.4% uninsured rate makes it unlikely to attract the remote-worker migration that has reshaped other affordable rural counties. Glades remains one of Florida's most static communities — a place the boom largely passed by.

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