Bartow County, GA
Property Data

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

Total Properties

55,630

Average Home Price

$390,521

Average Square Feet

2,006

Price per Sq Ft

$176

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
88020,697

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

55,630

Median Home Price

$327,330

Average Home Price

$390,521

Average Square Feet

2,006

Price per Sq Ft

$176

Recent Sales (12mo)

1,145

YoY Price Change

0.4%

Sales Velocity

2.8%

Bartow County, Georgia: Blue-Collar Roots, Suburban Momentum — and a Market Catching Its Breath

Nestled in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains about 45 miles northwest of Atlanta, Bartow County occupies a particular sweet spot in Georgia's growth story — close enough to the metro to benefit from its economic gravity, far enough to retain a distinct identity rooted in manufacturing, agriculture, and small-town Southern life. Cartersville, the county seat, sits along the Etowah River and has long been associated with the Cherokee heritage of the region and, more recently, with the industrial corridor that follows I-75 north.

That industrial backbone matters for understanding who lives here. A median household income of $79,431 — modestly above the national median — reflects a workforce that leans on skilled trades and manufacturing rather than professional services. Only 15.4% of residents hold a bachelor's degree and just 7.5% a graduate degree, well below national norms, yet incomes remain competitive. That's the signature of a working-class economy that actually works — where a union plant job or a skilled construction trade can still support a family.

A Housing Market That Built Out Fast — and Is Now Digesting It

The median year built of 1998 tells a specific story: Bartow County was a beneficiary of Atlanta's late-1990s and 2000s suburban sprawl wave, when families priced out of Cherokee and Cobb counties pushed further north along the I-75 corridor. That expansion left a landscape dominated by single-family homes (76.8% of the housing stock) and car-dependent infrastructure — 76.1% of workers drive alone, and public transit accounts for just 0.6% of commutes.

Now the market is recalibrating. After years of pandemic-era appreciation, prices are down 4.3% year-over-year — one of the clearest signals in the Atlanta exurbs that the frenzy has cooled. At a median of $315,000, homes here remain significantly more accessible than the national median of $320,000, and at $180 per square foot, Bartow offers genuine space for the dollar. The wide spread between the 10th percentile ($113,600) and 90th percentile ($670,000) suggests a market with real diversity — from modest rural homes to newer executive subdivisions near Lake Allatoona.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$315,000Below national median of $320,000
YoY Price Change-4.3%Cooling after pandemic-era run-up
Homeownership Rate73.9%Well above national average of ~65%
Rent Burden Rate41.4%Far exceeds the 30% threshold

The Renter Paradox

Here's the tension buried in an otherwise stable ownership market: renters are quietly struggling. With a rent burden rate of 41.4% — meaning the average renter spends well over the 30% affordability threshold on housing — and 18.7% under severe rent burden, Bartow's 26.1% renter population faces a meaningfully different reality than their homeowning neighbors. Median rent of $1,202 against local incomes that skew lower for renter households creates genuine strain, compounded by an uninsured rate of 14.6% that suggests limited financial cushion.


FAQs

What makes Bartow County, Georgia unique? Bartow County combines old Georgia manufacturing identity with new Atlanta-orbit suburban growth in a way few counties manage. Its Cherokee heritage sites, proximity to Lake Allatoona, and I-75 industrial corridor give it an economic and cultural profile that's genuinely its own — not simply an Atlanta bedroom community, but not isolated from metro opportunity either.

Is Bartow County a good place to buy a home right now? For buyers, the 4.3% price decline may represent an opening after years of rapid appreciation. At $180 per square foot with strong single-family inventory and homeownership rates near 74%, the fundamentals favor ownership — especially for households anchored to local employment rather than speculating on appreciation.

Why are renters so cost-burdened if overall incomes seem healthy? The county's income figures are buoyed by dual-income homeowning households. Renter households tend to be younger, single-income, or working in lower-wage service and retail jobs — a demographic for whom $1,200/month rents can consume a disproportionate share of take-home pay, even in a county that looks affordable on the surface.

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