Tift County, GA
Property Data

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

Total Properties

24,034

Average Home Price

$240,243

Average Square Feet

2,024

Price per Sq Ft

$128

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
415,222

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

24,034

Median Home Price

$222,000

Average Home Price

$240,243

Average Square Feet

2,024

Price per Sq Ft

$128

Recent Sales (12mo)

306

YoY Price Change

6.5%

Sales Velocity

58.5%

Tifton's Hidden Market Surge: South Georgia's Sleeper Story

Tift County sits in the agricultural heartland of South Georgia, anchored by Tifton — a city whose identity is inseparable from the University of Georgia's Tifton Campus, a world-renowned agricultural research hub that gave the world Tifton 85 bermudagrass. It's not a place that typically dominates real estate headlines. Which makes what's happening in its housing market all the more striking.

A 30% Price Jump in a Rural County — What's Driving It?

A year-over-year home price increase of 30.1% is the kind of number you'd expect from a Sunbelt boomtown, not a South Georgia county of 41,000 people. Yet the data is unambiguous. Median home prices have climbed to $220,000, while the average transaction now clears $249,000 — both figures that would have seemed improbable here just a few years ago.

Part of the explanation lies in the regional migration ripple effect. As coastal Georgia and metro Atlanta markets have become increasingly unaffordable, buyers have moved inland and southward. Tifton sits on I-75, giving it surprising connectivity — it's roughly equidistant between Atlanta and Florida's state line. For remote workers and retirees seeking affordability without total rural isolation, that positioning matters.

Still, at $125 per square foot with an average home size approaching 1,900 square feet, Tift County remains a genuine value compared to national norms. The national median home value stands at $320,000; here you're getting comparable square footage for $220,000. The affordability ratio — at roughly 4.1x income — sits nearly exactly at the national benchmark, a rare equilibrium that's fast disappearing as prices outpace local wages.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$220,000Well below $320K national median
YoY Price Change+30.1%Among the sharpest rural surges in Georgia
Price Per Sq Ft$125Significant value vs. state and national avg
Rent Burden Rate37.5%Exceeds the 30% burden threshold

The Affordability Paradox

The 30% price spike hasn't come without consequences. While homeowners are sitting on sudden equity gains, renters — who make up 39% of occupied households — are being squeezed hard. The median rent of $799 might sound modest, but against a median household income of $53,165, it pushes renters well past the standard 30% burden threshold. Nearly 15% of renters face severe rent burden, spending more than half their income on housing. With a poverty rate of 20.9% and a child poverty rate approaching 30%, this is a community where affordability stress has very real human dimensions.

The Gini index of 0.474 — meaningfully higher than the national average around 0.45 — hints at a bifurcated economy: agricultural and industrial workers on one end, university-connected professionals and land-owning farm families on the other.

What the Workforce Data Reveals

A labor force participation rate of just 55.7% and a low uninsured rate of... wait — actually the 16% uninsured rate here is notably high, well above the national average of roughly 9%, suggesting healthcare access gaps that correlate with the county's significant agricultural workforce population.


FAQs

What makes Tift County unique in Georgia's real estate market? Tift County is experiencing one of the more dramatic rural price surges in Georgia — up 30% year-over-year — driven by its I-75 corridor location, agricultural economy anchored by UGA's research campus, and spillover demand from pricier Georgia markets. Despite the surge, it remains one of the more affordable counties in the state on a price-per-square-foot basis.

Is Tifton, GA a good place to buy a home right now? For buyers, Tifton still offers real value — $125/sqft and a price-to-income ratio near the national benchmark. The risk is that rapid appreciation may be outrunning local income growth, and renters are already feeling the squeeze. If you're buying to hold, the trajectory is favorable; if you're a first-time buyer with a local income, the window of easy affordability may be narrowing.

Why are home prices rising so fast in rural South Georgia? Interstate access, remote work flexibility, and migration pressure from Atlanta and coastal Georgia metros have all pushed demand into secondary markets like Tifton. Add in low housing inventory relative to recent transaction volume, and the conditions for rapid appreciation are in place even in markets that flew under the radar for decades.

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