Highway 82
Jefferson, GA 30549
Barrow County
XX124 101A
34.027718, -83.569484
County context
There's a particular kind of Georgia county that tells the story of exurban America better than almost any other demographic profile can — and Barrow County is one of them. Sitting roughly 50 miles northeast of Atlanta along the US-29 corridor, Barrow has become a pressure valve for the metro's relentless housing inflation. Young families priced out of Gwinnett and Hall counties have been streaming east for a decade, and the numbers reflect exactly that: a median age of just 36.4, a quarter of the population under 18, and household sizes averaging nearly three people. This is family country, built on the premise that affordability is worth a longer commute.
At first glance, Barrow County looks like a genuine affordability success story. A median home price of $340,000 against a median household income of $77,477 yields a price-to-income ratio of roughly 4.4x — not far from the national benchmark of 4x, and dramatically better than the Atlanta metro's core counties where ratios routinely exceed 6x. The county's 79.5% homeownership rate is exceptional by any measure, far exceeding the national norm and reflecting both the area's deeply single-family character (84.5% of housing stock) and its appeal to owner-occupants over investors.
But the renter picture tells a different story. A rent burden rate of 45.7% — with 22.6% of renters classified as severely burdened — is a quiet crisis hiding behind the homeownership headlines. With median rent at $1,197 and relatively modest incomes for non-homeowners, Barrow's rental market punishes those who haven't yet gotten a foothold on the property ladder. This is a pattern seen across fast-growing exurban counties nationwide: ownership is accessible, but renting is a trap.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $340,000 | 4.4x local median income |
| Homeownership Rate | 79.5% | well above national avg of ~65% |
| Rent Burden Rate | 45.7% | far exceeds 30% healthy threshold |
| YoY Price Change | -2.1% | mild cooling after pandemic surge |
One of Barrow's more nuanced data points is its education profile. With only 13.9% of adults holding a bachelor's degree and 7.1% holding graduate degrees, the county sits well below state and national averages for college attainment. But that doesn't map to unemployment — at 3.3%, Barrow is essentially at full employment. The county's economy leans on manufacturing, logistics, and trades, industries that reward skilled workers without requiring four-year credentials. The 34.2% of residents with only a high school diploma are largely employed and contributing to a community that, despite a 10.2% poverty rate, maintains a Gini inequality score of 0.389 — relatively compressed compared to Georgia's urban cores.
The 16.5% limited-English population reflects the same immigration patterns reshaping communities across the Northeast Georgia corridor, adding cultural depth to what might otherwise read as a straightforward suburban growth story.
What makes Barrow County unique? Barrow occupies a rare niche: genuinely affordable for homebuyers within commuting distance of one of America's largest metro areas, while maintaining a tight-knit, family-oriented community identity anchored in Winder, its county seat. Its median home was built in 2003, meaning most of the county's housing stock is relatively modern — a product of the rapid growth that followed Atlanta's eastward expansion.
Is Barrow County a good place to buy a home right now? The -2.1% year-over-year price dip suggests the post-pandemic frenzy has cooled, which may actually represent opportunity for buyers. With a 4.9% vacancy rate and 750 sales in the past 12 months against a listed inventory of roughly 1,600 properties, the market is active but no longer overheated — a meaningful shift from the bidding-war conditions of 2021–2022.
Why are renters so cost-burdened if the county seems affordable? Barrow's affordability is almost entirely a homeownership story. The rental stock is thin — only 20.5% of occupied units are renter-occupied — which limits competition among landlords and keeps rents elevated relative to what many local renters earn. For buyers with down payments, Barrow delivers; for renters, the math rarely works in their favor.
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