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While the rest of Florida has become synonymous with skyrocketing home prices, bidding wars, and transplant-driven speculation, Leon County tells a quieter, more complicated story. Home to Tallahassee — the state capital and a university town anchored by Florida State University, Florida A&M University, and Tallahassee Community College — this county runs on government paychecks, academic calendars, and student debt rather than tourism dollars or tech IPOs. The result is a housing market that looks affordable on the surface but harbors a genuine affordability crisis hiding in plain sight.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Value | $279,800 | 13% below the national median |
| Rent Burden Rate | 54.8% | Nearly double the 30% threshold |
| Severe Rent Burden | 30.5% | Nearly 1 in 3 renters paying 50%+ of income on housing |
| Graduate Degree Rate | 21.0% | Among Florida's highest; reflects FSU/FAMU presence |
The county's median age of just 31.9 years signals something important: a large, rotating student population that artificially suppresses homeownership rates, inflates rental demand, and skews income figures downward. With school enrollment at 35.3% — an extraordinary share for a county of nearly 300,000 — it's no surprise that homeownership sits at 51.9% and nearly half of all occupied housing units are renter-occupied.
But here's what's genuinely alarming: the rent burden figures. Over half of Leon County renters spend more than 30% of their income on housing — well above the threshold at which housing is considered unaffordable — and nearly a third qualify as severely rent burdened, meaning housing consumes more than half their income. For a county where the median rent is $1,230 and median household income trails the national average by roughly $10,000, the math is brutal, particularly for working families and service-sector workers who aren't students and can't leave when the semester ends.
Leon County's Gini Index of 0.499 places it among the more economically unequal counties in the state. The highly educated government and university workforce — nearly 21% of adults hold graduate degrees, a figure that would be exceptional even in college towns like Gainesville or Charlottesville — coexists uneasily with an 18.5% poverty rate and a child poverty rate of 17.3%. That gap isn't coincidental; it's structural. Public-sector and academic employment tends to compress middle incomes while leaving behind those outside those institutions.
The 11.2% housing vacancy rate offers a telling data point: there are units sitting empty in a market where renters are stretched to breaking point, suggesting a mismatch between what's available and what working residents can actually afford.
Q: What makes Leon County's housing market different from the rest of Florida? Unlike coastal Florida counties driven by retiree migration, vacation speculation, or tech industry growth, Leon County's market is fundamentally shaped by government employment and higher education — two sectors that generate stable but modest wages. This creates a paradox: home prices remain relatively restrained, yet renters — many of them students or service workers — face some of the steepest affordability pressures in the state.
Q: Is Tallahassee/Leon County a good place to buy a home right now? For buyers, the price-to-income ratio is more manageable than most of Florida, and median home values remain below the national average — a rarity in the Sunshine State. However, with nearly half the housing stock occupied by renters and a high vacancy rate suggesting soft investor demand, appreciation may be more modest than in Miami, Tampa, or Orlando. The county rewards owner-occupants more than speculators.
Q: Why is poverty so high in a county with so many college graduates? This is the defining tension of university towns everywhere. Highly credentialed faculty, administrators, and state workers pull the education statistics upward, while a large student population — many living below the poverty line by income measures even if temporarily — and a service workforce dependent on those institutions pulls poverty rates in the other direction. The 18.5% poverty rate here is less a sign of economic decay than of demographic complexity.
Leon County is one of the largest real estate markets with over 117,359 properties in our database.
With an average price of $348,337, Leon County offers mid-range housing options.
Buyers can expect to pay around $181 per square foot in this market.
Home prices in Leon County are 32% lower than the Florida average.
| Metric | Leon County | Florida Avg | vs State |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $348,337 | $515,778 | -32% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 1,927 | 1,856 | +4% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $181 | $278 | -35% |
| Properties | 117,359 | 12,646,100 | -99% |
Based on property sales data from the last 18 months
The average home price in Leon County, FL is $348,337, based on analysis of 117,359 properties in our database.
Our database includes 117,359 properties in Leon County, FL, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Leon County, FL is $181. This is calculated from an average home price of $348,337 and average size of 1,927 square feet.
Homes in Leon County, FL average 1,927 square feet, with an average price of $348,337.
Leon County, FL is one of 67 counties in Florida with property data available. Browse other counties to compare market conditions and pricing.
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