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There's a particular tension running through Bonner County that tells you almost everything about the new American West. Home to Sandpoint — a jewel of a lakeside town on the shores of Lake Pend Oreille, bracketed by the Selkirk and Cabinet mountain ranges — this is a county where natural beauty has become both the greatest asset and the most pressing problem. Outdoor recreation, remote work flexibility, and the pandemic-era exodus from West Coast metros have combined to push median home values to $433,400, a figure that's 35% above the national median yet earned against household incomes that trail the country by nearly $10,000.
That gap is the story of Bonner County in a single number.
The median age here is 48.2 years — substantially older than the national median of 38.9 — and more than a quarter of residents are 65 or older. This is what geographers call an "amenity retirement" county: people arrive for the skiing at Schweitzer Mountain, the sailing on Lake Pend Oreille, and the sheer postcard quality of small-town life. They often arrive with equity from higher-priced markets, which distorts everything downstream.
The labor force participation rate of just 51.5% reflects this dynamic directly. When a significant portion of your population is retired or semi-retired, traditional income metrics understate actual purchasing power — but they also mask how unaffordable the market has become for working families who never cashed out of a San Francisco condo.
The child poverty rate of 16.8% is the uncomfortable data point that sits alongside the Instagrammable mountain vistas. Nearly one in six children in this county lives in poverty, even as the housing stock appreciates year over year.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Value | $433,400 | 35% above national median, 6.7x local median income |
| Vacancy Rate | 26.4% | Nearly 1 in 4 housing units sits empty — second-home effect |
| Median Age | 48.2 years | Among oldest in Idaho; 10+ years above national median |
| Severe Rent Burden | 17.1% | Of renters paying 50%+ of income on housing |
A 26.4% housing vacancy rate is extraordinary — and deeply revealing. The national vacancy rate hovers around 11%. In Bonner County, roughly 7,000 housing units sit empty at any given time, almost certainly concentrated in vacation cabins and second homes along the lake and in the mountains. This structural dynamic means the county simultaneously has a housing shortage for year-round working residents and a glut of properties that never enter the long-term rental or for-sale market at accessible prices.
The rent burden situation confirms this squeeze: 38.6% of renters are cost-burdened — above the 30% threshold that defines housing stress — and 17.1% face severe burden, meaning they're spending more than half their income on rent. With a median rent of $1,059, it's not that rents are extreme in absolute terms; it's that the local wage base simply hasn't kept pace with a market reshaped by remote workers and retirees with outside wealth.
What makes Bonner County different from other Idaho counties? Bonner County is ground zero for Idaho's amenity migration wave. While much of the state has grown due to business relocation and suburban expansion around Boise, Bonner County's growth has been driven primarily by lifestyle migration — people choosing the Sandpoint area for its access to skiing, lake recreation, and remote work-friendly scenery. This creates a distinctive economic profile: high homeownership (77.6%), high vacancy (second homes), older population, and significant inequality between asset-wealthy arrivals and working-class locals.
Is Bonner County affordable to live in? For working families, increasingly not. The price-to-income ratio has reached nearly 6.7x — well above the 4x national benchmark considered affordable. Renters face particular pressure, with more than a third cost-burdened. The disconnect between property values driven by out-of-market buyers and wages earned locally in tourism, trades, and services defines Bonner County's central affordability challenge heading into the late 2020s.
Why is the disability rate so high in Bonner County? At 17.8%, Bonner County's disability rate exceeds national norms, which aligns with its notably older population. Age is the single strongest predictor of disability status nationally, and in a county where more than one in four residents is 65 or older, elevated disability rates are a structural demographic outcome — not necessarily an outlier worth alarm. It does, however, underscore the healthcare infrastructure demands on a rural county with a rapidly aging base.
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