Explore accurate parcel and ownership records,
directly sourced from county assessors.
When most people think of Florida real estate, they picture waterfront condos, retiree communities, and markets where the median home now costs more than $400,000. Hardee County — a landlocked agricultural expanse in the state's south-central interior — reads like a dispatch from a different country. At a median home value of just $129,400, homes here cost less than 40 cents on the dollar compared to the national median, and barely a fraction of what's traded in coastal metros like Naples or Sarasota an hour's drive away. That gap isn't an anomaly. It's the story.
Wauchula, the county seat, sits amid phosphate mining country and citrus groves that have defined this region's economy for over a century. That agricultural identity — stubborn, productive, and largely invisible to Florida's tourism-driven imagination — shapes nearly every number in the county's data profile. The county's labor force participation rate of 51.4% reflects a workforce organized around seasonal harvest cycles and physically demanding extractive industries, not the service and tech sectors drawing workers to Tampa or Orlando.
Here's the surprise: despite home prices that seem impossibly cheap by Florida standards, renters in Hardee County are in crisis. The rent burden rate sits at a staggering 51.7% — meaning the average renter spends more than half their income on housing — and fully a third of renters (33.5%) qualify as severely rent burdened. That's not just above the 30% threshold that defines burden nationally; it's a signal that wages and rents have drifted dangerously out of alignment even in one of Florida's most affordable counties. With median rent at $954 and median household income at $54,231, the math is brutally tight for families who don't own.
Homeownership is the real dividing line here. At 71.4%, the county's ownership rate is well above both the state and national average — a legacy of multigenerational farming families holding land. But the 28.6% who rent are overwhelmingly vulnerable: the child poverty rate of 32.6% and SNAP participation topping one-in-four households paint a picture of concentrated hardship among the county's non-landowning population.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Value | $129,400 | Less than 40% of the $320,000 national median |
| Rent Burden Rate | 51.7% | Nearly double the 30% national threshold |
| Bachelor's Degree Rate | 8.5% | vs. ~34% nationally — among Florida's lowest |
| Poverty Rate | 24.3% | Nearly 3x Florida's coastal county averages |
A 17.6% housing vacancy rate — nearly one in five units sitting empty — might suggest a market in freefall, but in agricultural counties like Hardee, vacancy is often structural: seasonal worker housing that sits idle, aging mobile home stock that's no longer habitable, and limited investor appetite for renovation. It's not speculative overbuilding. It's neglect.
What makes Hardee County unique in Florida's real estate market? Hardee is one of the few Florida counties where agricultural land-holding culture has kept homeownership high while keeping prices genuinely low — a combination almost extinct in a state consumed by out-of-state buyer demand and speculative investment.
Is Hardee County affordable for renters? Despite headline prices that look cheap, renters here face severe strain. More than half spend over 30% of income on rent, and the county's limited inventory of quality rental housing, combined with low wages in agriculture and mining, makes renting particularly precarious.
Why are education levels so low in Hardee County? With just 8.5% of adults holding a bachelor's degree, Hardee reflects a regional economy that has historically valued — and rewarded — physical labor over credentialed work. The citrus and phosphate industries absorbed generations of workers without requiring college, and that structural path persists even as both industries have contracted.
Hardee County has 15,443 properties in our comprehensive database.
With an average price of $398,677, Hardee County offers mid-range housing options.
Buyers can expect to pay around $228 per square foot in this market.
Home prices in Hardee County are 23% lower than the Florida average.
| Metric | Hardee County | Florida Avg | vs State |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $398,677 | $515,778 | -23% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 1,746 | 1,856 | -6% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $228 | $278 | -18% |
| Properties | 15,443 | 12,646,100 | -100% |
Based on property sales data from the last 18 months
The average home price in Hardee County, FL is $398,677, based on analysis of 15,443 properties in our database.
Our database includes 15,443 properties in Hardee County, FL, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Hardee County, FL is $228. This is calculated from an average home price of $398,677 and average size of 1,746 square feet.
Homes in Hardee County, FL average 1,746 square feet, with an average price of $398,677.
Hardee County, FL is one of 67 counties in Florida with property data available. Browse other counties to compare market conditions and pricing.
Browse property data by city
Get instant access to comprehensive county assessors-based property data with your free API key
Need Bulk Data?
Email us at hello@realie.ai