Property details·Blakesburg, Monroe County, Iowa·130617008000000
2497 692nd Avenue
Blakesburg, IA 52536
Monroe County
130617008000000
40.942807, -92.726183
| Category | Amount | Year |
|---|---|---|
| Tax value | $894 | 2026 |
| Market value | $96,420 | 2025 |
| Assessed value | $96,420 | 2026 |
| Building value | $63,960 | — |
| Land value | $32,460 | — |
Values reflect public tax roll data as of the year shown.
County context
At first glance, Monroe County looks like a rural Iowa success story — median home prices barely above $140,000, an unemployment rate of just 2.9%, and poverty levels that sit well below the national average. But dig a little deeper and this small south-central Iowa county of 7,500 people reveals some genuinely striking contradictions, including one data point that stops you cold.
A year-over-year price decline of -42.2% is not a typo — but it almost certainly isn't a housing crash either. With only 27 sales recorded in the past 12 months against a universe of 51 tracked properties, Monroe County's market is so thinly traded that a handful of distressed or atypical sales can swing the median dramatically. This is a liquidity problem masquerading as a price problem. When a county seat like Albia — the heart of Monroe County's economy and civic life — sees so few transactions, the statistical signal is extraordinarily noisy. Buyers and sellers here should treat that figure as a data artifact, not a market verdict.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $141,000 | less than half the $320,000 national median |
| Homeownership Rate | 83.8% | well above the national ~65% average |
| Rent Burden Rate | 55.0% | crushingly above the 30% threshold |
| Vacancy Rate | 18.0% | signals weak demand or aging stock |
The homeownership story here is genuinely impressive — 83.8% of occupied housing units are owner-occupied, a rate that reflects the deep-rooted agrarian culture of this former coal-mining county. For those who own, the price-to-income ratio sits around 1.9x, practically unheard of in today's national market. Monroe County's housing is, for owners, among the most accessible in the country.
For renters, however, the picture inverts sharply. With a median rent of $787 and 55% of renters spending more than they should on housing, Monroe County's small rental market is punishing. This isn't a mystery: when only 16% of households rent, landlords face little competitive pressure to keep rents in check, and the county's modest income base leaves renters with thin margins.
Nearly one in five residents is 65 or older, and just 15% hold a bachelor's degree — both figures that reflect Monroe County's identity as a working-class agricultural and light-industrial community rather than a knowledge-economy hub. The county's coal heritage faded decades ago, leaving Albia as a small service center for surrounding farms. Still, 94.3% of households have computer access and over 82% have broadband — connectivity figures that matter enormously for retaining younger residents and remote workers.
The 18% vacancy rate tells a cautionary tale about long-term demographic pressure. Monroe County isn't collapsing, but it is slowly hollowing out.
What makes Monroe County, Iowa unique? Monroe County is one of Iowa's most affordable homeownership markets in the country by price-to-income ratio, rooted in its agricultural and former coal-mining heritage centered around Albia. But extreme thinness in the resale market — fewer than 30 sales annually — makes price trends highly unreliable, and its renters face disproportionate cost burdens despite low absolute rents.
Is Monroe County, Iowa a good place to buy a home? For buyers seeking low absolute prices and minimal competition, yes — median prices near $141,000 and a price-to-income ratio under 2x are rare nationally. The tradeoffs are a very limited resale market, an aging housing stock (median build year: 1961), and an 18% vacancy rate that suggests limited upside appreciation.
Why is the rent burden so high if rents seem affordable? Monroe County's $787 median rent looks modest in dollar terms, but the county's wage base — concentrated in agriculture, light manufacturing, and services — means many renters earn too little for even those rents to feel manageable. It's a reminder that affordability is always relative to local incomes, not national benchmarks.
Access owner information, tax records, transfer history, and more through our API.
View API pricingGet instant access to comprehensive county assessors-based property data with your free API key
Need Bulk Data?
Email us at hello@realie.ai