3150 56th Street Trail

Property details·Center Point, Benton County, Iowa·83028800

5Beds
3Baths
2,926Sq ft
86.23Acres
2011Built
$305KLast sale

Location

Address

3150 56th Street Trail

Center Point, IA 52213

Benton County

Parcel ID

83028800

Coordinates

42.200267, -91.884064

Building details

Bedrooms
5
Bathrooms
3
Square feet
2,926
Year built
2011
Fireplace
Yes
Garage
5-car A

Land & lot

Lot size
86.23 acres
Land area
3,756,178 sq ft
Land use code
1008

Tax & assessment

CategoryAmount
Tax value$10,434
Market value$799,900
Assessed value$799,900
Building value$719,900
Land value$80,000

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

County context

Benton County 2026 Insights

Benton County, Iowa: Quiet Prosperity on the Cedar River Corridor

There's a particular kind of financial stability that doesn't make headlines — no tech boom, no coastal feeding frenzy, no viral "most affordable city" listicle. Benton County, Iowa sits squarely in that category. Nestled between Cedar Rapids and Iowa City in the heart of the state's agricultural corridor, this largely rural county of roughly 25,700 residents has quietly assembled a profile that would make many American communities envious: incomes well above the national median, home prices well below it, and an unemployment rate that barely registers.

At 2.3% unemployment — a figure that most urban economists would consider structural rather than cyclical — Benton County reflects the tight labor markets that have characterized Iowa's small manufacturing and ag-service towns in recent years. The county seat of Vinton, along with smaller communities like Blairstown and Norway, anchor a local economy tied to agriculture, light manufacturing, and the service sectors that support Cedar Rapids commuters who've chosen rural life over city rents.

A Textbook Affordability Story

StatValueContext
Median Home Value$198,40038% below the national median of $320,000
Homeownership Rate84.3%nearly 20 points above the national average
Price-to-Income Ratio2.3xvs. ~4x national benchmark — genuinely affordable
YoY Price Change+5.1%steady appreciation, not a speculative spike

The price-to-income ratio here is the number that deserves attention. At just 2.3x median household income, buying a home in Benton County remains within reach for a working family in a way that feels almost anachronistic in 2024 America. Compare that to the national benchmark of roughly 4x, or the double-digit ratios plaguing coastal metros, and Benton County starts to look less like a sleepy backwater and more like a case study in sustainable housing markets.

The 84.3% homeownership rate — extraordinary by any measure — is a direct consequence of that affordability. When homes are priced at two years of household income, people buy them.

The Aging Countryside

The county's median age of 43.3 years and the fact that nearly one in five residents is 65 or older tells a familiar Midwestern story: young people leave for Des Moines, Cedar Rapids, or further afield, while retirees stay put in paid-off farmhouses. The median home was built in 1958, and the single-family home rate of 88% reflects a housing stock that's overwhelmingly owner-occupied and low-density — 36 people per square mile.

The 17.7% limited English figure is surprisingly high for a county this rural, pointing to the meatpacking and agricultural processing workforce that has reshaped many Iowa communities over the past two decades.

FAQs

What makes Benton County, Iowa unique? Its combination of genuine affordability, extremely high homeownership, and near-full employment is rare anywhere in the U.S. It functions as a bedroom community for Cedar Rapids while retaining a strongly agricultural identity — and its housing market has yet to price out the working families who built it.

Is Benton County a good place to buy a home? For value buyers, almost certainly yes. A price-to-income ratio of 2.3x, steady 5.1% annual appreciation, and a rent burden well below the 30% stress threshold suggest a stable, if unspectacular, market with real upside for long-term owners — particularly as Cedar Rapids suburban growth continues pushing eastward.

Why is the vacancy rate relatively high at 8.9%? In rural Iowa, vacancy often reflects aging housing stock, seasonal farm properties, and estates in transition rather than a soft market. With only 155 sales recorded in the last 12 months against a total of over 11,000 housing units, turnover is low — homes here tend to be held, not flipped.

Nearby properties

Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.

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