Oglethorpe County, GA
Property Data

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

Total Properties

12,891

Average Home Price

$337,593

Average Square Feet

1,809

Price per Sq Ft

$160

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
1,1842,895

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

12,891

Median Home Price

$275,000

Average Home Price

$337,593

Average Square Feet

1,809

Price per Sq Ft

$160

Recent Sales (12mo)

126

YoY Price Change

11.1%

Sales Velocity

9.6%

Oglethorpe County, Georgia: Rural Affordability With a Hidden Tension

Tucked between Athens and the South Carolina border in Georgia's upper Piedmont, Oglethorpe County is exactly the kind of place that gets overlooked in conversations about Georgia's growth story. While Fulton County dominates headlines and Clarke County debates its next apartment complex, Oglethorpe quietly sits at a compelling crossroads: genuinely affordable land prices, a stable homeownership culture, and a rental market quietly squeezing the small minority who don't own.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$270,750well below national median of $320,000
Homeownership Rate81.5%nearly 20 points above national average
Rent Burden Rate47.4%well above the 30% threshold considered distressed
YoY Price Change+3.8%steady, not speculative

The Ownership Economy

The single most striking number in Oglethorpe County is the homeownership rate: 81.5%. Nationally, homeownership hovers just above 65%. Even for rural Georgia, this is high — and it reflects something real about the county's character. With a population density of just 35 people per square mile and a median home built in 1998, this is a county of relatively modern single-family homes on land that families actually own. No transit network, no apartment towers — nearly 84% of workers drive alone to their jobs, and the concept of car-free living is essentially nonexistent here.

This ownership culture is also a wealth-preservation story. At $160 per square foot, Oglethorpe County offers some of the most accessible land values within commuting distance of Athens (Clarke County), where the University of Georgia has steadily pushed up local housing costs. Many Oglethorpe residents have almost certainly made the calculus: trade the commute for equity.

The Renters Left Behind

Here's where the data turns uncomfortable. While owners enjoy modest appreciation and affordable purchase prices, the 18.5% of households who rent face a genuinely difficult market. A median rent of $832 doesn't sound alarming — but with a severe rent burden rate of 16% and overall rent burden at 47.4%, a substantial share of renters are spending nearly half their income on housing. In a county where the child poverty rate hits 17.3% (notably above the overall poverty rate of 11.2%), this burden falls disproportionately on families still building toward ownership.

A County in Demographic Transition

With a median age of 42.6 and 19% of residents over 65, Oglethorpe is aging — a pattern common to rural Georgia counties that saw youth outmigration over the past two decades. The 12.4% without a high school diploma and limited bachelor's degree attainment (15%) suggest a workforce more tied to trades and agriculture than to the knowledge economy expanding 30 miles west in Athens. That said, unemployment at just 3.3% tells a more optimistic story about local labor market function.

The vacancy rate of 18.7% — high by most standards — likely reflects seasonal or second-home properties rather than distress, given how actively the market turned over 112 sales in the past year against a tracked inventory of 204 properties.


FAQs

What makes Oglethorpe County unique in Georgia's housing market? Oglethorpe combines an unusually high homeownership rate (81.5%) with prices well below the national median, making it one of the more accessible owner-occupant markets within the Athens metro orbit. It offers a genuinely different path to homeownership than urbanizing Clarke or Oconee counties.

Is Oglethorpe County affordable for renters? Not particularly. Despite modest nominal rents around $832/month, the rent burden rate exceeds 47% — meaning the average renter household is spending far beyond the standard 30% affordability threshold. The county's economic profile strongly favors buyers over renters.

Is Oglethorpe County growing? Growth is measured rather than explosive. Annual price appreciation of 3.8% suggests steady demand — likely driven by Athens spillover — without the speculative frenzy seen in Atlanta's exurbs. Infrastructure gaps, including 16.6% of households without internet, may temper faster growth until connectivity improves.

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