Property details·Rabun Gap, Rabun County, Georgia·048C 060A
60 Blueberry Lane
Rabun Gap, GA 30568
Rabun County
048C 060A
34.949778, -83.364089
| Category | Amount | Year |
|---|---|---|
| Tax value | $1,327.42 | 2026 |
| Market value | $206,762 | 2025 |
| Assessed value | $82,705 | 2026 |
| Building value | $164,762 | — |
| Land value | $42,000 | — |
Values reflect public tax roll data as of the year shown.
County context
Tucked into the extreme northeastern corner of Georgia, where the Blue Ridge Mountains pile up against the borders of North and South Carolina, Rabun County is one of those places that looks different depending on who's looking at it. To visitors, it's a paradise — Lake Burton, Tallulah Gorge, the Chattooga River made famous by Deliverance, and some of the most dramatic scenery in the Southeast. To data analysts, it's a study in contradictions that few mountain communities can match.
Start with the vacancy rate: 41.4% of Rabun County's housing units sit empty at any given time. That number would signal catastrophic decline in most American counties. Here, it almost certainly signals the opposite — a thriving second-home and vacation rental market that has quietly transformed this rural Appalachian community into a playground for affluent out-of-state buyers. The gap between median home value ($299,450) and average home price ($544,087) tells the same story. A handful of luxury lakefront properties on Burton, Rabun, and Seed Lake are pulling that average skyward, while the median holds at a more modest level. The 90th percentile home price of $905,625 confirms that serious money is flowing into these mountains.
The median age of 49.9 years — nearly a decade older than the national median — and the fact that more than 28% of residents are 65 or older reflects a demographic pattern common to desirable rural retreats: working families leave for opportunity elsewhere, and retirees arrive with equity from elsewhere. Labor force participation at just 50% is striking but logical in this context.
What's less comfortable to acknowledge is the inequality hiding beneath the scenic beauty. Rabun County's Gini index of 0.492 is exceptionally high for a rural county its size, approaching levels seen in major urban centers. Child poverty runs at 24.1% — well above the county's already-elevated overall poverty rate of 14.8%. Meanwhile, 13.6% of residents lack health insurance. The same mountains that attract affluent retirees and weekend visitors also shelter genuine rural poverty that often goes unseen.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Vacancy Rate | 41.4% | Driven by second-home market, not decline |
| Avg vs. Median Home Price | $544K vs. $299K | $245K gap signals extreme luxury skew |
| Child Poverty Rate | 24.1% | Far exceeds overall poverty rate of 14.8% |
| Population 65+ | 28.5% | Nearly double the national share of ~17% |
One data point stands out for a different reason: year-over-year price change of 0.0%. After years of pandemic-era migration turbulence that sent mountain property prices surging across Southern Appalachia — neighboring Highlands-Cashiers in North Carolina saw extraordinary run-ups — Rabun County appears to have hit a plateau. With interest rates elevated and the initial wave of remote-work migration settling, the speculative heat has cooled. Whether this represents a healthy stabilization or the early signal of a correction in vacation-market counties is the question serious buyers should be asking.
FAQ
What makes Rabun County unique? Rabun County is one of Georgia's few true mountain resort counties, built around lakes, whitewater rivers, and Appalachian scenery. Its housing market is driven less by local residents than by second-home buyers and retirees, producing an unusually high vacancy rate, dramatic spread between median and average prices, and levels of income inequality rarely seen in rural counties this small.
Is Rabun County expensive to live in? It depends enormously on what you're buying. A primary-residence home can be found near the median of $299,000, but the luxury lakefront market pushes averages well above $500,000. For renters, the picture is harder — at $1,016 median rent with a severe rent burden rate of 24%, local workers earning modest wages face genuine affordability pressure in a market increasingly shaped by outside wealth.
Is Rabun County growing or shrinking? With a median age of nearly 50, high retirement-age population, and only 16% of residents under 18, Rabun County is not growing through natural increase. Its future population trajectory depends almost entirely on continued in-migration from retirees and remote workers — and whether working-age families can afford to stay.
Our database includes 1,409 properties in Rabun Gap.
With an average price of $429,998, Rabun Gap offers mid-range housing options.
Buyers can expect to pay around $222 per square foot in this market.
Home prices in Rabun Gap are 16% lower than the Rabun County average.
| Metric | Rabun Gap | Rabun County | vs County |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $429,998 | $514,728 | -16% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 1,933 | 2,128 | -9% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $222 | $242 | -8% |
| Properties | 1,409 | 22,176 | -94% |
Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.
The average home price in Rabun Gap, GA is $429,998, based on analysis of 1,409 properties in our database.
Our database includes 1,409 properties in Rabun Gap, GA, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Rabun Gap, GA is $222. This is calculated from an average home price of $429,998 and average size of 1,933 square feet.
Homes in Rabun Gap, GA average 1,933 square feet, with an average price of $429,998.
Rabun Gap, GA is one of many cities in Rabun County, GA with property data available. Browse other cities in the county to compare market conditions and pricing.
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