Ga Highway 257

Property details·Empire, Bleckley County, Georgia·B48 104

3Beds
2Baths
1,680Sq ft
3.00Acres
1998Built

Location

Address

Ga Highway 257

Empire, GA 31014

Bleckley County

Parcel ID

B48 104

Coordinates

32.336414, -83.310613

Building details

Bedrooms
3
Bathrooms
2
Square feet
1,680
Stories
1
Year built
1998
Fireplace
Yes

Land & lot

Lot size
3.00 acres
Land area
130,680 sq ft
Land use code
1006

Tax & assessment

CategoryAmount
Tax value$454.64
Market value$47,584
Assessed value$19,034
Building value$38,584
Land value$9,000

Values reflect public tax roll data as of the year shown.

County context

Bleckley County 2026 Insights

Cochran's Quiet Market Hides a Startling Price Surge

Bleckley County sits in the geographic heart of Georgia — Cochran, its county seat, even bills itself as the "Center of Georgia" — but this small agricultural community of 12,400 has long existed well outside the attention of state real estate watchers. That may be changing. A 35.9% year-over-year price increase in a county where homes still trade at a median of $145,000 is not a number you see in stagnant markets. Something is moving here, and it deserves a closer look.

The county's economy has historically leaned on agriculture, Middle Georgia Technical College, and the regional healthcare draw of Bleckley Memorial Hospital. None of those industries typically generate the kind of demand shock that produces a 36% annual price swing. Yet with only 75 sales recorded in the past 12 months against a total tracked inventory of 129 properties, the volatility is partly mathematical — in thin markets, a handful of transactions can move the median dramatically. Still, the directional signal is real: buyers are showing up in places they previously ignored.

Affordability That Looks Better Than It Is

At $99 per square foot and a median price just under $150,000, Bleckley County looks like a buyer's paradise compared to Georgia's broader market. A household earning the county's median income of $53,005 faces a price-to-income ratio of roughly 2.7x — far below the national benchmark of 4x and a fraction of what Atlanta-area buyers endure. Homeownership sits at a healthy 73.3%, well above the national average.

But the affordability story has a shadow side. A 20.5% poverty rate and a child poverty rate of 27.4% mean a significant portion of residents are not participating in that ownership opportunity. Nearly one in four SNAP-enrolled households, a 45% rent burden rate among renters, and a severe rent burden affecting 22.5% of renting households paint a picture of two Bleckley Counties: one where working families own modest homes with manageable mortgages, and another where renters paying $765 a month are financially stretched thin.

The Structural Challenges Underneath

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$145,000vs. $320,000 national median
YoY Price Change+35.9%among the highest in rural Georgia
Rent Burden Rate45.0%well above the 30% threshold
Labor Force Participation51.5%significantly below national ~63%

A labor force participation rate of just 51.5% is perhaps the most telling single figure in this dataset. It suggests a county where disability (20.4% of residents), early retirement, caregiving, and limited job access are keeping large numbers of working-age adults out of the formal economy. Broadband access at 71.8% — leaving more than one in five households entirely offline — further limits the county's ability to attract remote workers who might otherwise be drawn by the rock-bottom housing costs.

The 18.2% housing vacancy rate also warrants attention. In a hot market that number typically falls. Here it suggests the price surge is concentrated in move-in-ready stock while a substantial portion of the housing inventory remains functionally off-market: aging, distressed, or tied up in estate situations common in rural Georgia counties.


FAQs

What makes Bleckley County unique in Georgia's real estate market? Bleckley is one of the few rural Georgia counties posting near-double-digit price appreciation against a starting point still well below $150,000 median. Its combination of genuine affordability, high homeownership, and a paper-thin active market creates unusual price volatility — making it both accessible and unpredictable for buyers.

Is Bleckley County a good place to buy investment property? The numbers are enticing on the surface — low entry prices, rising values, and a renter population facing significant burden — but the 18.2% vacancy rate and limited economic base suggest caution. Demand is real but narrow, and the pool of qualified renters in a county with 7.4% unemployment and a 51.5% labor participation rate is smaller than the raw population figures imply.

Why is the rent burden so high if rents are only $765/month? Because incomes at the bottom of Bleckley's distribution are extremely low. A Gini coefficient of 0.487 — indicating high inequality — means the median income of $53,000 masks many households earning far less. For a household bringing in $20,000 annually, even $765 monthly rent consumes over 45% of gross income.

Nearby properties

Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.

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