Audubon County, IA
Property Data

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

Total Properties

14,775

Average Home Price

$112,531

Average Square Feet

1,822

Price per Sq Ft

$113

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
1026,966

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

14,775

Median Home Price

$112,500

Average Home Price

$112,531

Average Square Feet

1,822

Price per Sq Ft

$113

Recent Sales (12mo)

4

YoY Price Change

23.4%

Sales Velocity

-69.2%

Audubon County, Iowa: Where Homes Are Almost Free — But Who's Buying?

There's a peculiar tension at the heart of Audubon County's housing market. Median home prices sit at $115,000 — barely one-third of the national median and a fraction of what you'd pay in Des Moines or Ames — yet the county's real estate activity has nearly stalled. Only five homes sold in the past twelve months across the tracked market. When land is this cheap, the question isn't whether people can afford to move here. It's whether they want to.

That question cuts to the core of what's happening across rural western Iowa. Audubon County, population 5,622, sits roughly halfway between Des Moines and Omaha in the gently rolling prairie of the Loess Hills region. Agriculture dominates the economy — corn, soybeans, hogs — and the county seat of Audubon (pop. ~2,000) anchors a community that has been quietly contracting for decades. The median age of 47.4 tells much of the story: this is a county where young people leave and older residents age in place, a pattern so common across the rural Midwest that demographers have given it its own vocabulary.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Value$115,00036% of the $320,000 national median
Homeownership Rate76.4%well above the national ~65% average
YoY Price Change-8.2%significant decline in a soft rural market
Rent Burden42.7%far above the 30% healthy threshold

The Paradox of Cheap Housing and Burdened Renters

The most jarring number in Audubon County's profile isn't the price decline — it's the rent burden. At 42.7%, the average renter here is spending well beyond the standard 30% threshold, with nearly one in four renters classified as severely burdened. How does this happen in a place where median rents are just $707?

The answer lies in who's renting. Homeownership here is exceptionally high at 76.4%, meaning renters are a minority — and they tend to be lower-income residents who couldn't qualify for a mortgage even at these prices. A child poverty rate of 18.7%, combined with a household income that runs $21,000 below the national median, means a significant slice of the community is financially stretched despite the county's apparent affordability.

An Aging, Rooted Population

The housing stock reflects the county's generational character. The median year built is 1956, and 92.6% of units are single-family homes — a classic rural Iowa landscape of farmhouses, modest ranch-styles, and well-kept Main Street bungalows. With a 9.4% vacancy rate and just 21 total tracked properties, this is not a dynamic market. It's a stable one, perhaps too stable, with very little turnover.

The -8.2% year-over-year price decline is worth watching, though small sample sizes can swing dramatically in thin rural markets. More telling is the structural quiet: low unemployment at 1.9% suggests those who are here are working, but labor force participation at 62.3% reflects a population with a significant retired share — one in four residents is 65 or older.

FAQs

What makes Audubon County unique? Audubon County offers some of the most affordable homes in the United States — not as distressed urban inventory, but as solid single-family rural housing on the western Iowa prairie. It combines near-zero unemployment with an unusually high homeownership rate, making it a study in stability rather than growth.

Is Audubon County, Iowa a good place to buy a home? For buyers seeking rock-bottom entry prices and stable rural living, the case is real — $74,000 will get you into the bottom decile of the market. But the -8.2% price drop and thin sales volume signal that appreciation isn't the pitch here. Lifestyle and affordability are.

Why are renters struggling if housing is so cheap? Audubon's rental market serves its most economically vulnerable residents. With homeownership so dominant, the rental stock is small and serves a population whose incomes are often too modest even for $707 rents — a microcosm of rural poverty that cheap headline prices tend to obscure.

Market Overview

Audubon County has 14,775 properties in our comprehensive database.

Audubon County offers affordable housing with an average price of $112,531.

With a price per square foot of just $62, this area offers excellent value for buyers.

Frequently Asked Questions About Audubon County, IA Real Estate

What is the average home price in Audubon County, IA?

The average home price in Audubon County, IA is $112,531, based on analysis of 14,775 properties in our database.

How many properties are tracked in Audubon County, IA?

Our database includes 14,775 properties in Audubon County, IA, providing comprehensive market coverage.

What is the price per square foot in Audubon County, IA?

The average price per square foot in Audubon County, IA is $62. This is calculated from an average home price of $112,531 and average size of 1,822 square feet.

What is the average home size in Audubon County, IA?

Homes in Audubon County, IA average 1,822 square feet, with an average price of $112,531.

How does Audubon County, IA compare to other Iowa counties?

Audubon County, IA is one of 99 counties in Iowa with property data available. Browse other counties to compare market conditions and pricing.

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