1671 Wadsworth Drive

Property details·Albany, Terrell County, Georgia·073A-010

3Beds
2Baths
1,294Sq ft
10.15Acres
1980Built

Location

Address

1671 Wadsworth Drive

Albany, GA 31721

Terrell County

Parcel ID

073A-010

Coordinates

31.633076, -84.306073

Building details

Bedrooms
3
Bathrooms
2
Square feet
1,294
Stories
1
Year built
1980
Fireplace
Yes
Pool
Yes

Land & lot

Lot size
10.15 acres
Land area
442,134 sq ft
Zoning
001
Land use code
1001

Tax & assessment

CategoryAmount
Tax value$1,649.4
Market value$121,671
Assessed value$48,668
Building value$91,221
Land value$30,450

Values reflect public tax roll data as of the year shown.

County context

Terrell County 2026 Insights

Terrell County, Georgia: Deep Rural Hardship in the Heart of the Black Belt

There's a particular kind of economic geography that shapes the rural Deep South, and Terrell County, Georgia sits squarely within it. Located in the southwestern corner of the state — part of the historic Black Belt region whose rich agricultural soils once defined Georgia's plantation economy — this small county of fewer than 9,000 residents tells a story that most national real estate narratives completely ignore: what happens to housing markets when structural poverty persists across generations.

The numbers here are not subtle. A one-in-three poverty rate and a child poverty rate approaching 50% are figures that belong in conversations about public policy, not just property markets. Nearly a quarter of adults never completed high school, and only 6.7% hold a bachelor's degree — less than a third of the national rate. These aren't background statistics. They are the market.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Value$111,50065% below national median of $320,000
Child Poverty Rate49.2%Nearly 1 in 2 children below poverty line
YoY Price Change-28.3%Severe contraction in an already thin market
Vacancy Rate20.9%More than double the typical U.S. rate of ~9%

A Market in Contraction

The headline figure — a 28.3% year-over-year price decline — demands context. With only 66 sales recorded in the past 12 months across a pool of just 109 tracked properties, this is not a deep or liquid market. A handful of distressed sales or the absence of a few high-value transactions can swing the numbers dramatically. That said, the underlying dynamics genuinely support softness: a 20.9% vacancy rate signals a county where housing supply has structurally outrun demand, as outmigration quietly hollows out neighborhoods that once anchored rural Georgia life.

The extreme spread between the 10th percentile price ($44,593) and the 90th percentile ($580,000) reveals something else important: Terrell County has two housing markets. There is a bottom tier of deeply distressed or aging rural stock, and there is a thin upper tier that likely reflects larger agricultural estates or renovated properties. The average sale price of $328,836 is so far above the median of $136,000 that it almost certainly reflects that upper-end skew.

The Affordability Paradox

At $727 per month, median rent appears cheap in absolute terms — but with 37.3% of renters classified as rent-burdened, affordability remains out of reach for many households. When incomes are low enough, even inexpensive housing strains budgets. Nearly one in five renters faces severe rent burden, a quiet crisis invisible to anyone scanning only nominal prices.

The labor force participation rate of 49.6% — meaning roughly half of working-age adults are outside the workforce entirely — explains why income-based affordability metrics still look so grim despite low nominal prices.

FAQ

What makes Terrell County unique? Terrell County is one of Georgia's most rural and economically distressed counties, located in the historically agricultural southwestern region of the state. Its housing market is unusually thin and bifurcated, combining deeply affordable distressed stock with higher-value agricultural properties, against a backdrop of persistent multigenerational poverty that shapes every economic indicator.

Is Terrell County a good place to buy investment property? The low entry prices are superficially attractive, but buyers should weigh the 20.9% vacancy rate, sharply declining year-over-year prices, and limited rental demand driven by low incomes and outmigration. This is a high-risk market where carrying costs and tenant scarcity can quickly erode returns that look promising on paper.

Why is the vacancy rate so high in Terrell County? Like many rural Deep South counties, Terrell has experienced sustained population loss as residents — particularly younger adults — migrate toward Atlanta, Albany, and other urban centers in search of employment. The housing stock left behind exceeds the remaining population's needs, creating a structural surplus that suppresses values and discourages new development.

Nearby properties

Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.

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