Pottawattamie County, IA
Property Data

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

Total Properties

60,488

Average Home Price

$262,711

Average Square Feet

1,209

Price per Sq Ft

$210

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
2817,742

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

60,488

Median Home Price

$215,000

Average Home Price

$262,711

Average Square Feet

1,209

Price per Sq Ft

$210

Recent Sales (12mo)

865

YoY Price Change

1.6%

Sales Velocity

83.3%

Pottawattamie County, Iowa: The Affordable Edge of the Metro

There's a reason Pottawattamie County keeps showing up in conversations about Midwest value. Sitting directly across the Missouri River from Omaha, Nebraska, this Iowa county offers something increasingly rare in 2024: genuine affordability within commuting distance of a major metro. With a median home price of $212,500 and a price-to-income ratio hovering near 3x — less than half the national benchmark of 4x — Pottawattamie is one of the more compelling housing stories in the region, even if the market has cooled slightly in the past year.

The county seat, Council Bluffs, does most of the heavy lifting here. Long the working-class sibling to Omaha's white-collar boom, Council Bluffs has historically attracted residents priced out of Nebraska's largest city. But the relationship is more symbiotic than it might appear: Omaha's growth in finance, healthcare, and logistics has consistently spilled westward across the river, filling Pottawattamie's housing stock with commuters who work in Nebraska and pay Iowa taxes. That cross-state dynamic helps explain why 80% of residents still drive alone to work and why public transit usage barely registers at 0.6%.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$212,500~66% of national median
Price-to-Income Ratio~3xvs. 4x national benchmark
Homeownership Rate70.3%above national avg of ~65%
YoY Price Change-1.5%modest correction after pandemic run-up

A Housing Stock With Character — and Age

The median year built of 1960 tells an important story. Much of Pottawattamie's housing is mid-century single-family stock — sturdy, spacious by square footage standards — and 75% of units are single-family homes. That's a high figure even by Iowa standards, reinforcing the county's fundamentally suburban and semi-rural character. The $95,000 floor at the 10th percentile means entry-level buyers still have real options, while the $445,000 ceiling at the 90th percentile reflects the upper end of riverfront and newer suburban development near Treynor and Macedonia.

The slight year-over-year price dip of 1.5% isn't alarming — it mirrors a broader national cooling — but it does suggest the pandemic-era price surge has run its course here.

The Rent Burden Problem Nobody Talks About

Here's the uncomfortable number: 40.9% rent burden, with 17.2% of renters in severe burden territory. In a county this affordable by ownership standards, those figures demand explanation. The answer likely lies in the mismatch between rental stock quality and renter incomes — the bottom third of earners in Pottawattamie are stretching hard for aging apartments in a market that never built enough modern rental supply. With median rent at $970, the burden falls disproportionately on service workers, young families, and the 14.3% of children living in poverty.

The 17% limited-English-speaking population — notably high for rural Iowa — reflects a significant meatpacking and agricultural labor community whose housing pressures are largely invisible in ownership-focused market narratives.


FAQs

What makes Pottawattamie County unique? It's one of the few counties in America where you can buy a home for roughly three times your household income while commuting to a major metro (Omaha). The cross-state dynamic with Nebraska creates a permanent affordability floor that most comparable Midwest counties lack.

Is Council Bluffs a good place to buy a home right now? For buyers, the fundamentals remain strong: high ownership rates, low price-to-income ratios, and a slight market correction mean less competition than during 2021–2022. The risk is in rental investment — rent burden is high but not because rents are high, which limits upside for landlords and signals tight margins.

Why are rent burdens so high in an affordable county? Affordability in Pottawattamie is primarily an ownership story. The renter population tends to be lower-income, and the county's rental supply — concentrated in older, smaller units — hasn't kept pace with the needs of a growing service-sector workforce.

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