Coweta County, GA
Property Data

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

Total Properties

69,320

Average Home Price

$449,934

Average Square Feet

2,430

Price per Sq Ft

$178

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
427,919

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

69,320

Median Home Price

$380,000

Average Home Price

$449,934

Average Square Feet

2,430

Price per Sq Ft

$178

Recent Sales (12mo)

1,818

YoY Price Change

5.4%

Sales Velocity

36.5%

Coweta County, Georgia: Atlanta's Affluent Exurb Finds Its Footing

There's a reason Coweta County keeps appearing on "best places to raise a family" lists that circulate through Atlanta-area Facebook groups. Nestled about 35 miles southwest of downtown Atlanta along the I-85 corridor, this former textile and farming county has spent the last two decades quietly transforming itself into one of metro Atlanta's most sought-after exurban destinations — and the data makes clear that transformation is largely complete.

The headline number is income. At $94,142, Coweta's median household income runs 25% above the national benchmark and situates the county firmly in Georgia's upper tier. This isn't accident — it reflects a sustained migration of professional families priced out of Fulton, Cobb, and Fayette counties who discovered that Newnan and Senoia (yes, the filming location for The Walking Dead) offered suburban quality of life at a meaningful discount. That calculus still holds, though the discount has narrowed.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$371,500roughly at national median despite much higher local incomes
Homeownership Rate77.6%well above national avg of ~65%
Rent Burden Rate52.1%alarmingly above the 30% threshold
YoY Price Change+1.2%cooling sharply after pandemic-era surge

The Ownership-Renter Divide

Coweta's 77.6% homeownership rate is a standout figure — nearly 13 percentage points above the national average — and it reflects the county's fundamental character as a single-family homeowner community. An striking 82.4% of housing units are single-family homes, a built environment almost exclusively oriented around the owner-occupant.

But this creates a serious squeeze for the 22% who rent. A median rent of $1,397 sounds modest until you consider that over half of Coweta renters are cost-burdened — spending more than 30% of income on housing — and 16% face severe burden. In a county where the ownership class is comfortable, the rental market has become structurally strained. With a vacancy rate of just 5% and new construction tilted toward for-sale product, relief is unlikely to come quickly.

A Commuter County at a Crossroads

The transportation profile tells a familiar exurban story: 76.6% of workers drive alone, public transit usage is essentially negligible at 0.4%, and virtually no one walks to work. Yet 12.7% now work from home — a figure that has reshaped Coweta's daily rhythms post-pandemic and likely accelerated its population growth as remote workers no longer need to endure the I-85 grind daily.

The limited English-speaking population at 17.3% is notably high for a county of this profile and hints at a significant workforce in agriculture, poultry processing, and light manufacturing that operates largely beneath the surface of the headline income figures.

What the Slowing Appreciation Signals

After years of double-digit pandemic-era gains, Coweta's 1.2% year-over-year price growth signals a market finding equilibrium. With a price-to-income ratio of roughly 4x — almost exactly the national benchmark — the county remains one of the genuinely affordable options for professional families in the greater Atlanta orbit.


FAQ: What makes Coweta County unique? Coweta combines unusually high homeownership rates and family-sized homes with income levels well above national norms, all at prices that remain comparatively accessible for the Atlanta metro — a balance few suburban counties manage to sustain this far into a growth cycle.

FAQ: Is Coweta County a good place to buy a home right now? With price growth cooling to 1.2% annually and a price-to-income ratio sitting near the national benchmark of 4x, Coweta looks relatively grounded compared to other Atlanta-area counties. The low vacancy rate and strong owner-occupant demand suggest downside risk is limited, though buyers should expect a predominantly car-dependent, suburban lifestyle with limited transit alternatives.

FAQ: Why is rent so expensive in Coweta County relative to incomes? The county's housing stock is overwhelmingly built for ownership, not renting, leaving a thin and competitive rental market. As purchase prices rose through the pandemic years, would-be buyers stayed in rentals longer, compressing availability and pushing rents upward faster than incomes for lower-wage workers could absorb.

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