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There's a reason Champaign County's median age sits at just 30.9 years — nearly five years younger than the national median — and it has nothing to do with a baby boom. The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, one of the nation's flagship public research universities with over 56,000 students and thousands more faculty and staff, fundamentally distorts every demographic and economic metric in ways that require careful unpacking. Read the data without that context and you'll miss the real story.
At $229,000, the county's median home price sits at roughly 72% of the national median — a figure that, on its face, screams affordability. And for families buying homes in Champaign's expanding suburban edges or in Urbana's established neighborhoods, it largely is affordable. The price-to-income ratio of about 3.6x actually beats the national benchmark of 4x.
But that framing obscures something more complicated happening at the rental end of the market. With 46.6% of households renting — unusually high for a Midwestern county — and a severe rent burden rate of 26.9%, more than one in four renters is spending over half their income on housing. Median rent at $1,018 might look modest nationally, but when your tenant pool includes graduate students, service workers, and university staff earning modest wages, that number bites hard.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $229,000 | ~72% of national median — genuine Midwest affordability |
| Severe Rent Burden | 26.9% | Over 1 in 4 renters spending 50%+ of income on housing |
| YoY Price Change | +13.7% | Dramatically outpacing inflation — a market heating fast |
| Graduate Degree Rate | 25.5% | Nearly double the national average of ~13% |
Here's what's genuinely surprising: Champaign County has a Gini index of 0.503 — a level of income inequality more commonly associated with urban coastal metros than a mid-sized Illinois county. The explanation lies in the university's dual nature. It produces some of the highest-earning computer science and engineering graduates in the country while simultaneously sustaining a large population of grad students living on stipends of $20,000–$25,000 annually, creating an unusual economic bimodality. The 18% poverty rate — far above Illinois's statewide rate — reflects this structural reality more than any failure of the local economy.
The 13.7% year-over-year price increase is the number that should command attention. Illinois broadly is not a hot real estate market, yet Champaign County is appreciating at a pace that rivals Sun Belt boomtowns. The University of Illinois's tech transfer pipeline — including the research park that houses companies like Abbott, Siemens, and State Farm operations — has been quietly drawing remote-work-compatible talent who recognize the area's quality of life at a fraction of Chicago's cost. That migration pattern, still nascent, appears to be arriving in the price data.
What makes Champaign County unique in Illinois real estate? It combines genuine affordability for buyers with unusually high rental stress — a paradox explained by the University of Illinois's outsized presence. The county is simultaneously a buyers' market for homeowners and a structurally challenging rental market for students and lower-wage workers, all within a rapidly appreciating price environment that's unusual for downstate Illinois.
Is Champaign County a good place to invest in rental property? The fundamentals are compelling: persistent tenant demand from a university with 56,000+ students, rising prices, and rents that — while burdening tenants — have room to grow relative to Illinois metros. The 11.2% vacancy rate warrants attention, however, as it reflects significant student-driven seasonal swings. Investors should underwrite for summer vacancy carefully.
Why is the poverty rate so high if home prices are relatively affordable? The 18% poverty rate is largely a statistical artifact of a large student population. Graduate students and undergraduates living on stipends or parental support appear in poverty statistics but often don't represent long-term economic hardship in the traditional sense. Strip out the student population and Champaign County's economic profile looks considerably closer to a typical prosperous Midwestern county.
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