Pasco County, FL
Property Data

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

Total Properties

359,995

Average Home Price

$411,860

Average Square Feet

1,818

Price per Sq Ft

$192

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
425,503

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

359,995

Median Home Price

$333,000

Average Home Price

$411,860

Average Square Feet

1,818

Price per Sq Ft

$192

Recent Sales (12mo)

11,914

YoY Price Change

1.5%

Sales Velocity

58.0%

Pasco County's Affordability Paradox: Florida's Boom County That's Still Playing Catch-Up

Pasco County doesn't make national headlines the way Miami or Orlando does, but it probably should. Wedged between Tampa Bay's urban core and Florida's sunbelt interior, this fast-growing county of nearly 600,000 residents is living through one of the more interesting housing stories in the Southeast — a place where homes are still relatively cheap by Florida standards, yet the people who rent there are quietly drowning.

Let's start with the number that surprises outsiders most: a median home value of $265,800 puts Pasco roughly 17% below the national median. In a state where coastal counties routinely post values above $500,000, that gap is significant. Pasco's affordability has long been its calling card — drawing retirees from the Northeast, working families priced out of Hillsborough and Pinellas counties, and remote workers who discovered that Wesley Chapel or New Port Richey offers a comparable lifestyle to Tampa for considerably less money.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Value$265,80017% below national median
Homeownership Rate75.5%well above national avg of ~65%
Rent Burden Rate50.8%vs 30% threshold — a quiet crisis
Severe Rent Burden23.9%nearly 1 in 4 renters spending 50%+ on housing

Two Pasco Counties in One

The homeownership rate of 75.5% tells a story of genuine middle-class stability — one of the highest rates you'll find in any Florida county of this size. For owners, Pasco largely delivers on its promise. A price-to-income ratio of roughly 3.9x actually sits below the national benchmark of 4x, meaning this is one of the few places in Florida where buying a home still makes mathematical sense for median earners.

But the rental market tells a completely different story. A 50.8% rent burden rate — meaning the median renter household spends over half its income on housing — is not a statistic, it's a crisis. And with nearly 24% of renters in severe burden (50%+ of income to rent), there's a significant population that the county's affordability narrative simply doesn't reach. Median rent of $1,372 against incomes that skew lower in the renter cohort creates an invisible pressure that aggregate statistics tend to obscure.

The Retirement Effect

With 22% of residents aged 65 or older and a median age of 43.7 — older than both the state and national medians — Pasco's demographic profile reflects decades of retiree migration. The famous "Sun City Center corridor" mentality extends well into this county. That aging population partly explains the 16.6% disability rate and the relatively low labor force participation of 56.7%, numbers that aren't signs of economic distress so much as a county with a large population that has aged out of the workforce.

The 10% veteran share also reflects deliberate relocation choices — military retirees from MacDill Air Force Base across the county line in Tampa frequently settle in Pasco for the space and the value.

The Remote Work Wildcard

An 18.4% work-from-home rate is one of Pasco's most consequential data points for its future. Post-pandemic remote work transformed Wesley Chapel and Land O' Lakes from Tampa exurbs into legitimate primary destinations. That influx has nudged prices upward and injected higher-income households into a county that historically skewed toward the working class — which partially explains the relatively elevated Gini coefficient of 0.460, suggesting growing income inequality beneath the surface.

With a college attainment rate of just 18.1% — well below the national average — Pasco isn't a knowledge-economy hub. It's a place where trades, healthcare, retail, and logistics drive employment. That's not a weakness, but it does mean wage growth faces a structural ceiling unless the county's rapid commercial development in its I-75 corridor keeps pace.


FAQs

What makes Pasco County unique? Pasco sits in a rare sweet spot: genuine homeownership affordability in a state that has largely priced out middle-income buyers, combined with proximity to Tampa's job market. Its rapid growth — particularly in the Wesley Chapel and Zephyrhills corridors — makes it one of Florida's fastest-transforming counties, even as its older coastal communities retain a quieter, old-Florida character.

Is Pasco County affordable for renters? Despite its reputation for affordability, Pasco is quietly difficult for renters. The rent burden rate exceeds 50%, meaning the typical renter household spends more than half its income on housing — a figure that classifies as a housing crisis by any standard metric. The affordability story in Pasco largely applies to buyers, not those without the savings or credit to enter the ownership market.

Is Pasco County a good place to retire? For many, yes — and the data reflects it. With one of Florida's higher homeownership rates, a relatively modest cost of living compared to coastal peers, and strong veteran and senior services infrastructure, Pasco has drawn retirees for decades. The tradeoff is limited public transit (just 0.4% of commuters use it) and a healthcare system still catching up to the county's rapid population growth.

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