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Black Hawk County — home to Waterloo and Cedar Falls — is one of those places that doesn't fit neatly into the Iowa narrative of sleepy farm towns or booming suburban sprawl. It's an industrial anchor city paired with a college town, a place where John Deere's tractor assembly plant and the University of Northern Iowa share the same county, and where that unusual combination creates a housing market that's simultaneously affordable by national standards and increasingly strained for the people who actually live there.
The headline number here is a 12.3% year-over-year price increase — remarkable for a Midwest county where the median home still sits at $196,000. That's barely 60% of the national median home value, yet prices are accelerating faster than most coastal markets managed in 2023. What's driving it? A few forces converging: post-pandemic migration from pricier Iowa metros like Des Moines, tight inventory relative to demand, and Waterloo's reputation as one of the last genuinely affordable mid-size cities within driving distance of the I-380 corridor. When remote workers from Chicago or Minneapolis discover they can buy a house in Black Hawk County for what a Chicago studio condo costs, the math gets compelling fast.
The spread between the 10th and 90th percentile prices — from $78,250 to $450,000 — tells the full story of a bifurcated market. Entry-level housing is still accessible; the upper tier is where transplants and investors compete.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $196,000 | 39% below national median of $320,000 |
| YoY Price Change | +12.3% | one of Iowa's steepest appreciation rates |
| Rent Burden | 45.8% | renters paying far beyond 30% threshold |
| Homeownership Rate | 65.3% | above national average despite income gap |
Here's the contradiction at the heart of Black Hawk County: owners are doing relatively well, renters are in crisis. With 45.8% of renters spending more than 30% of income on housing — and fully one in four facing severe rent burden — this is not the affordability story the headline price tags suggest. A $962 median rent sounds modest nationally, but against a per capita income of $37,409, it bites hard. Add a child poverty rate of 16.3% and SNAP participation near 12%, and you see a county where economic stress is concentrated sharply among the renting population.
The Gini index of 0.462 confirms it: Black Hawk County has meaningful income inequality for a mid-size Midwest county, likely driven by the gap between university-educated professionals in Cedar Falls and lower-wage manufacturing and service workers in Waterloo.
The 19.3% bachelor's degree attainment rate — well below the 36% national average — reflects Waterloo's working-class manufacturing identity more than Cedar Falls' college-town demographics. With 30.8% of residents holding only a high school diploma and another 32.3% having some college but no degree, the workforce is substantially blue-collar. That's not a weakness — it's why John Deere built here — but it does create pressure when rising home prices start eroding the affordability advantage that made this county attractive to workers in the first place.
What makes Black Hawk County unique? It's the rare Midwest county combining a major industrial employer (John Deere's Waterloo Works, one of the largest tractor plants in the world) with a state university in the same market. That dual identity creates unusual demographic layering — union manufacturing workers, college students, professors, and healthcare professionals all competing for housing in the same limited inventory.
Is it still affordable to buy a home in Black Hawk County? By national standards, yes — a $196,000 median price is well below the U.S. norm. But with prices jumping over 12% in a single year and rental costs already straining residents, the affordability window is narrowing. First-time buyers who waited through the pandemic may find the calculus changing faster than expected.
Why is the rent burden so high if home prices are low? Rents have risen significantly while wages for service and manufacturing workers have lagged. Many renters in Waterloo earn well below the county median income, making even modest rents a heavy burden — a dynamic common in mid-size industrial cities where homeownership remains the primary path to housing stability.
With 99,579 properties tracked, Black Hawk County is a major real estate market.
Black Hawk County offers affordable housing with an average price of $246,932.
Buyers can expect to pay around $156 per square foot in this market.
Home prices in Black Hawk County are 14% lower than the Iowa average.
| Metric | Black Hawk County | Iowa Avg | vs State |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $246,932 | $287,260 | -14% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 1,580 | 1,498 | +5% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $156 | $192 | -19% |
| Properties | 99,579 | 3,276,208 | -97% |
Based on property sales data from the last 18 months
The average home price in Black Hawk County, IA is $246,932, based on analysis of 99,579 properties in our database.
Our database includes 99,579 properties in Black Hawk County, IA, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Black Hawk County, IA is $156. This is calculated from an average home price of $246,932 and average size of 1,580 square feet.
Homes in Black Hawk County, IA average 1,580 square feet, with an average price of $246,932.
Black Hawk 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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