Henry County, GA
Property Data

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

Total Properties

100,451

Average Home Price

$438,458

Average Square Feet

2,373

Price per Sq Ft

$151

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
14,23426,132

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

100,451

Median Home Price

$320,000

Average Home Price

$438,458

Average Square Feet

2,373

Price per Sq Ft

$151

Recent Sales (12mo)

2,640

YoY Price Change

3.2%

Sales Velocity

22.4%

Henry County, Georgia: Atlanta's Southern Anchor Finds Its Limits

There's a specific kind of American suburb that emerges when a major metro runs out of affordable land in every other direction — and Henry County is a textbook example. Planted roughly 25 miles south of downtown Atlanta along I-75 and I-675, Henry County spent the 2000s and 2010s absorbing wave after wave of families priced out of Clayton, Fulton, and DeKalb counties. The result is a county of nearly a quarter-million people whose housing stock is strikingly new (median year built: 2002), overwhelmingly single-family (81.8%), and now showing the first signs that the affordability runway is shortening.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$320,000essentially at the national median despite lower incomes
Homeownership Rate72.5%well above the national average of ~65%
Rent Burden Rate48.4%severely above the 30% threshold
YoY Price Change-0.5%a rare pause after years of rapid appreciation

A Suburb Built on the Promise of Space

The data portrait here is one of a working-to-middle-class ownership society. Households average 2.89 people, a quarter of the population is under 18, and only 1.5% of households lack a vehicle — virtually everyone here drives, and nearly three-quarters drive alone to work. The infrastructure of daily life in Henry County is built around the car, the subdivision, and the commute north into metro Atlanta. Public transit usage sits at a negligible 0.9%, making the county's 92.4% broadband penetration rate more consequential than it might otherwise be: the 14.3% working from home represent a growing constituency that is quietly reshaping why people choose to live here.

The Affordability Paradox

Here's what's surprising: Henry County's median household income of $81,612 actually exceeds the national benchmark, yet home prices have essentially caught up to — and in some metrics surpassed — national norms. The county's price-to-income ratio has crept upward from the comfortable levels that originally made this corridor attractive. More alarming is the rental market. A median rent of $1,538 against the county's income distribution produces a rent burden rate of 48.4%, with nearly one in four households facing severe rent burden. For a county that built its identity on affordable ownership, the renters — 27.5% of households — are quietly living through a different story entirely. The child poverty rate of 14.1% is notably higher than the overall poverty rate of 9.4%, suggesting financial stress is concentrated in younger families who arrived more recently and haven't yet climbed the ownership ladder.

Education and the Next Chapter

The educational profile tells you something about the county's trajectory. Just 28% of adults hold bachelor's degrees or higher — below Georgia's state average and well below the Atlanta metro's knowledge-economy core. Some 34% have some college but no degree, reflecting a workforce built around logistics, healthcare, and trades rather than professional services. The sprawling warehouse and distribution network anchored by the nearby Atlanta airport's southward economic pull, along with a growing medical corridor around Stockbridge and McDonough, defines employment here more than office parks.

The slight price dip over the past year (-0.5%) likely reflects rising mortgage rates hitting a buyer pool that is more rate-sensitive than wealthier northern suburbs. It's a pause, not a reversal — but it signals that Henry County's era of effortless appreciation may require more than geography to sustain.


FAQs

What makes Henry County, Georgia unique? Henry County is one of metro Atlanta's fastest-grown suburban counties over the past two decades, distinguished by an unusually high homeownership rate, very new housing stock, and a location that served as a pressure valve for families priced out of closer-in Atlanta suburbs. Its identity is built around affordable family homeownership — a promise that is now under measurable strain for renters and recent arrivals.

Is Henry County, GA affordable to buy a home? It's more affordable than most of metro Atlanta's northern suburbs, but the gap has narrowed considerably. With a median home price around $320,000 and median household incomes near $82,000, the price-to-income ratio is roughly 3.9x — just at the national benchmark — which is reasonable, though rising mortgage rates have made monthly payments feel far less accessible than the headline price suggests.

Why is rent so expensive in Henry County compared to incomes? Nearly half of Henry County renters are considered rent-burdened, a striking figure for a county better known for homeownership. Rental inventory remains limited in a market dominated by single-family homes, and demand from households who can't yet afford a down payment in the current rate environment has pushed rents upward faster than wages have followed.

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