Appling County, GA
Property Data

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

Total Properties

17,869

Average Home Price

$166,729

Average Square Feet

1,812

Price per Sq Ft

$90

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
96314,586

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

17,869

Median Home Price

$132,500

Average Home Price

$166,729

Average Square Feet

1,812

Price per Sq Ft

$90

Recent Sales (12mo)

123

YoY Price Change

-15.3%

Sales Velocity

70.8%

Appling County, Georgia: Deep South Affordability with Deep Economic Strain

There's a version of the American housing story that almost never makes headlines: places where homes are genuinely cheap, where you can buy a house for less than the cost of a new pickup truck, and where that affordability is less a feature than a symptom. Appling County, tucked into the longleaf pine flatlands of southeast Georgia about 90 miles from Savannah, tells exactly that story.

The county seat of Baxley has long been a timber and agriculture hub, and the regional economy still bears those roots — steady, seasonal, and structurally limited in its ability to generate wealth. With a median household income of $43,728 — barely 58% of the national median — this is a community where wages have not kept pace with even modest living costs.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$135,450Among lowest in Georgia
Price-to-Income Ratio3.1xWell below 4x national benchmark — but poverty constrains buyers
YoY Price Change-22.9%Sharp correction after post-pandemic rural bump
Homeownership Rate71.8%Significantly above 65% national average

The Affordability Paradox

On paper, Appling County looks affordable by every metric. Homes sell for $89 per square foot, rent runs just $711 a month, and the price-to-income ratio sits well below the national danger zone. Yet a 23.8% poverty rate — and a child poverty rate of 34.2% that should stop readers cold — tells you that affordability alone doesn't translate to opportunity. One in five residents relies on SNAP benefits. The uninsured rate of 16.4% is nearly double the national average. Affordability without income mobility is just inexpensiveness.

The -22.9% year-over-year price drop is striking and worth explaining in context. Rural Georgia counties like Appling saw a modest pandemic-era price surge as remote workers and retirees explored cheaper southern markets. That wave has now receded sharply, and prices are correcting back toward fundamentals — which, in a county with a 17.5% housing vacancy rate, were never particularly strong to begin with.

Labor and Education: The Structural Ceiling

Only 5% of residents hold a bachelor's degree — a figure that ranks among the lowest in the state and helps explain the county's wage floor. Nearly one in five adults lacks a high school diploma. With labor force participation at just 52.4%, a meaningful portion of working-age adults are outside the formal economy entirely, whether due to disability (14.7% rate), caregiving, or simply the limited local job market.

The 72.2% broadband access rate, while improving, still leaves roughly 1 in 4 households without reliable connectivity — a real barrier to remote work in a county where only 3.2% work from home.

What the High Homeownership Rate Reveals

Appling's 71.8% homeownership rate, well above the national average, reflects generational land-holding patterns common in rural Deep South counties rather than active market demand. Many of these homes — median year built: 1978 — have been in families for decades.


What makes Appling County unique? It represents a distinct type of Southern rural market: genuinely affordable housing in absolute dollar terms, high homeownership rooted in tradition rather than wealth-building, and a post-pandemic price correction that wiped out recent gains faster than almost anywhere in Georgia.

Is Appling County a good place to invest in real estate? The combination of high vacancy rates, falling prices, and constrained local incomes makes speculative investment risky. The market serves local, long-term owners far better than outside investors seeking appreciation.

Why is the child poverty rate so high despite low housing costs? Low home prices reduce one cost, but the lack of higher-wage employers, limited educational attainment, and minimal public safety net infrastructure combine to keep a large portion of families — particularly those with children — in persistent economic hardship regardless of what housing costs.

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