Clayton County, GA
Property Data

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

Total Properties

95,450

Average Home Price

$292,254

Average Square Feet

1,947

Price per Sq Ft

$130

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
7,02816,132

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

95,450

Median Home Price

$224,000

Average Home Price

$292,254

Average Square Feet

1,947

Price per Sq Ft

$130

Recent Sales (12mo)

2,199

YoY Price Change

0.8%

Sales Velocity

48.2%

Clayton County, Georgia: Hartsfield's Shadow, Atlanta's Pressure Valve

There's a reason Clayton County has one of the youngest median ages — 33.3 years — of any suburban Atlanta county. Sandwiched between the world's busiest airport and the city's southside neighborhoods, Clayton functions as something of a demographic pressure valve: a place where working families priced out of Fulton and DeKalb counties land, build households, and commute through one of the most extraordinary transit nodes on the planet. Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport doesn't just border Clayton County — it defines it, driving employment, noise patterns, logistics infrastructure, and the rhythms of daily life in ways that few suburban counties in America can claim.

Affordability That Cuts Both Ways

At a median home price of $224,000, Clayton County looks like a bargain on paper — and compared to the national median of $320,000, it genuinely is. The price-to-income ratio sits at roughly 3.8x, actually better than the 4x national benchmark, which places it among the more affordable suburban markets in the Atlanta metro. Entry-level buyers can find properties under $100,000 (the 10th percentile sits at $99,900), and the typical home — a 1,784 square foot single-family house built around 1986 — delivers real space for the money.

But affordability in ownership doesn't tell the full story. The rental market is quietly brutal. With a median rent of $1,307 and a median household income of $58,507, renters here face a 54.7% rent burden — nearly double the 30% threshold that defines housing stress. Nearly three in ten renters are severely burdened, spending more than half their income on housing. In a county where 46.8% of households rent, this isn't a niche problem. It's a structural crisis affecting nearly half the population.

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$224,00030% below national median
Rent Burden Rate54.7%vs. 30% healthy threshold
Child Poverty Rate24.8%nearly 1 in 4 children
YoY Price Change+0.4%essentially flat appreciation

A Young, Working County Treading Water

The median age of 33.3 and a population where 27.3% are children under 18 signal a county full of young families — yet the economic indicators suggest many are struggling to gain traction. The 16.8% poverty rate and 24.8% child poverty rate are sobering numbers, particularly alongside an uninsured rate of 17.7% that far exceeds national averages. Nearly one in five residents lacks health coverage. SNAP participation at 18.7% is elevated but consistent with a county where per capita income of $26,826 sits well below the national figure.

The education pipeline warrants attention: only 14.1% of residents hold a bachelor's degree, and 15.2% lack a high school diploma. In a metro increasingly dominated by knowledge-economy employers, Clayton's workforce skews toward logistics, hospitality, and service industries tied to the airport economy.

What the Flat Prices Signal

Year-over-year price growth of just 0.4% — essentially zero in real terms — suggests Clayton isn't riding the same wave as Cherokee or Forsyth counties to the north. With 1,628 sales over 12 months against a total housing stock of over 114,000 units and an 8% vacancy rate, the market is moving but not surging. This may actually be an entry window for buyers willing to bet on Aerotropolis-era development around the airport corridor.


What makes Clayton County unique? Clayton County is the only suburban Atlanta county with a major international airport physically within — or directly adjacent to — its borders. Hartsfield-Jackson is both the county's largest employer and its defining geographic reality, shaping everything from land use to commute patterns.

Is Clayton County affordable for homebuyers? For buyers, yes — the price-to-income ratio is actually favorable compared to national benchmarks. But renters face severe cost burdens, with the typical household spending over half its income on rent, making it one of the more strained rental markets in metro Atlanta despite lower-than-average rents in absolute terms.

Why is Clayton County's home appreciation so low? Flat price growth reflects a combination of factors: elevated vacancy rates, a renter-heavy market, and investor caution compared to Atlanta's northern suburbs. The county's affordability ceiling may be capping upward price movement even as demand from displaced Atlanta renters continues to build.

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