0 Clements Road
Adairsville, GA 30103
Floyd County
M10Z006
34.349876, -85.056407
County context
Floyd County is Rome, Georgia — and Rome is one of those mid-size Southern cities that quietly defies easy categorization. Nestled at the confluence of three rivers in the Ridge and Valley region of northwest Georgia, it anchors a regional economy built around healthcare (Atrium Health Floyd is the county's dominant employer), light manufacturing, and a small but active college presence through Berry College and Shorter University. That economic profile — stable but not high-wage — explains almost everything you need to know about how property markets work here.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $219,000 | 32% below national median of $320,000 |
| Homeownership Rate | 62.1% | above national avg of ~65%, solid for the region |
| Rent Burden Rate | 45.7% | well above the 30% threshold considered distressed |
| YoY Price Change | +2.4% | modest appreciation, cooling from pandemic highs |
At $219,000, Floyd County's median home price looks like a bargain compared to Atlanta's suburban sprawl or national benchmarks. The price-to-income ratio lands around 3.5x — actually better than the national benchmark of 4x — which means homeownership is theoretically within reach for working families here. That explains why 62.1% of households own their homes, a respectable rate for a county with a 16.8% poverty rate.
But the rental picture tells a very different story. A median rent of $971 against a median household income of $62,540 sounds manageable on paper, until you realize that nearly 23% of renters are severely rent burdened — meaning they're spending more than half their income on housing. That's a crisis wearing a modest price tag. Renters here aren't struggling because rents are astronomically high; they're struggling because wages in healthcare support roles, retail, and light manufacturing simply don't go far enough.
A Gini index of 0.468 is telling. For context, the U.S. average hovers around 0.49, so Floyd County isn't an outlier — but it signals meaningful income stratification for a county of under 100,000 people. The P10-to-P90 price spread ($58,520 to $450,000) confirms it: there are genuinely distressed properties here alongside comfortable suburban homes, often within a few miles of each other.
The 25.4% child poverty rate is the number that should command attention. That's roughly one in four children growing up in poverty in a county where housing appears affordable. It points to a structural income problem that discounted home prices alone can't solve.
Homes here are older — median year built of 1969 — and modestly sized at around 1,719 square feet. The 10% vacancy rate is elevated, suggesting some inventory overhang and pockets of disinvestment, particularly in older neighborhoods closer to downtown Rome. At $152 per square foot, buyers get genuine value, which has attracted some retirees and remote workers priced out of Chattanooga and Atlanta metro areas.
FAQ: What makes Floyd County, Georgia unique in the real estate market? Floyd County offers one of the rare combinations in the South: genuinely below-national-average home prices with a price-to-income ratio that actually favors buyers. The presence of Berry College, a regional hospital system, and river geography gives Rome cultural amenities unusual for a city its size — without the price premium those features typically command.
FAQ: Is Rome, Georgia a good place to invest in rental property? The data is mixed. Demand exists — 37.9% of households rent — but severe rent burden among tenants (nearly 23%) signals that many renters are financially stretched, creating real risk for landlords banking on consistent payments. The more compelling opportunity may be in affordable for-sale housing targeted at first-time buyers, given the favorable purchase-price-to-income dynamics.
FAQ: Why is the rent burden so high in Floyd County despite relatively low rents? Because affordability is always relative to local wages. Rome's economy skews toward healthcare support, service work, and manufacturing — jobs that pay $30,000–$45,000 annually. When a significant portion of the workforce earns at that level, even a $971 median rent can consume 30–40% of take-home pay before utilities, transportation, or childcare.
Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.
Access owner information, tax records, transfer history, and more through our API.
View API pricingGet instant access to comprehensive county assessors-based property data with your free API key
Need Bulk Data?
Email us at hello@realie.ai