Property details·Box Springs, Muscogee County, Georgia·154 001 006H
7750 Cartledge Road
Box Springs, GA 31801
Muscogee County
154 001 006H
32.562439, -84.684809
| Category | Amount | Year |
|---|---|---|
| Tax value | $500.52 | 2026 |
| Market value | $37,730 | 2025 |
| Assessed value | $15,092 | 2026 |
| Land value | $37,730 | — |
Values reflect public tax roll data as of the year shown.
County context
Muscogee County — home to Columbus, Georgia's second-largest city — sits at an unusual intersection: genuinely affordable home prices in an era of national housing crisis, yet a population under serious financial stress. The county's median home price of roughly $188,000 is barely 58% of the national median, which on the surface reads as a buyer's paradise. Dig deeper, and a more complicated picture emerges.
Columbus exists in Fort Moore's gravitational pull. The massive Army installation (renamed from Fort Benning in 2023) anchors the local economy and explains several data quirks at once: the county's 14.3% veteran population is well above national norms, the median age skews young at 35.1, and the unusually low homeownership rate of 50.2% — in a Deep South city where rentership has historically been lower — reflects the transient nature of military households cycling through on 2-3 year assignments. When a significant chunk of your population is literally ordered to live somewhere temporarily, your renter-occupied share climbs regardless of affordability conditions.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $187,750 | 41% below national median |
| Rent Burden Rate | 46.0% | vs 30% healthy threshold |
| YoY Price Change | +10.5% | well above national average |
| Homeownership Rate | 50.2% | low for a Southern mid-size city |
The most striking tension in Muscogee County's housing data is this: homes are cheap by any national standard, yet nearly half of renters are rent-burdened, and 23.5% face severe rent burden — spending more than half their income on housing. With a median rent of $1,072 and a median household income of $56,622, the math only works if you're a dual-income household. For the county's 16.5% of households on SNAP benefits or the 18.8% living in poverty, $1,072/month is simply out of reach. Columbus is affordable for people who can buy; it's a squeeze for everyone renting at the bottom.
That 10.5% year-over-year price appreciation is eye-catching and worth watching closely. Columbus has historically been insulated from the boom-bust cycles that punish coastal markets, but this level of appreciation — sustained — begins eroding the very affordability that defines the county's appeal.
The 56.3% labor force participation rate is noticeably below the national average of around 62-63%, and the 6.5% unemployment rate outpaces the national figure. The child poverty rate of 25.5% — one in four children — signals that economic mobility challenges are being inherited across generations. With only 17.6% of adults holding a bachelor's degree (well below the national ~35%), Columbus is competing for economic diversification in a credentials economy with a structural disadvantage.
The Synovus Financial headquarters and a growing cybersecurity sector tied to Fort Moore's intelligence mission offer promising diversification anchors, but their footprint in local employment data hasn't yet shifted the needle on income inequality — the county's Gini coefficient of 0.495 reflects one of the more unequal income distributions in Georgia.
What makes Muscogee County unique in Georgia's housing market? Columbus is one of the few Georgia markets where median homes remain under $200,000 while simultaneously experiencing double-digit annual price growth — a rare combination that reflects both its long-standing affordability baseline and growing demand pressure from military, tech, and remote-work migration.
Is Columbus, GA a good place to buy a home right now? For buyers, the price-to-income ratio of roughly 3.3x remains well below the national 4x benchmark, suggesting conventional affordability. However, the 10.5% annual appreciation rate and rising rent burdens suggest that window may be narrowing — particularly if interest rates keep monthly payments elevated despite lower sticker prices.
Why is rent burden so high in an affordable market? Columbus's low home prices don't automatically translate into low rents — and the county has a significant population of lower-wage service workers, military families, and young households who haven't accumulated the savings for a down payment. Affordable markets can still have unaffordable rents when income inequality is steep.
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