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In an era when the national conversation around housing is dominated by six-figure down payments and bidding wars priced out of reach for working families, Moultrie County quietly offers something increasingly rare: homes that actually make financial sense. Tucked into the heart of central Illinois corn country — anchored by the small city of Sullivan, home to the beloved Little Theatre on the Square — this county of fewer than 15,000 residents is posting some of the most surprising housing numbers in the state.
That 22.5% year-over-year price jump is the headline. For a county where the median home was selling around $130,000 not long ago, a surge to $162,000 still leaves buyers in a position most coastal observers can barely imagine: a price-to-income ratio comfortably below 3x. Nationally, that benchmark sits around 4x, and in Illinois metros like Chicago it blows past 6x. Moultrie County homebuyers are experiencing something that has effectively vanished from large American markets — genuine affordability with room to absorb appreciation.
The spread between the 10th and 90th percentile home prices tells a nuanced story. Entry-level buyers can find a foothold at $67,700, while the upper end reaches $482,500 — a six-fold range within a single rural county. This isn't a monolithic market of identical farmhouses. Sullivan's modest bungalows, century-old Main Street Victorian conversions, and the sprawling agricultural estates on the county's periphery create a surprisingly layered inventory. At $107 per square foot, even the nicer properties represent a fraction of what similar square footage commands in Illinois's collar counties.
The 85% single-family home rate and 77.4% homeownership rate reinforce the character of the place: this is owner-occupied, yard-having, small-town Illinois in its most recognizable form.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $162,000 | Under 3x median household income — well below 4x national norm |
| YoY Price Change | +22.5% | Dramatic surge for a county with historically stable prices |
| Homeownership Rate | 77.4% | Significantly above national average; renters are the exception here |
| Uninsured Rate | 12.8% | Elevated, signaling gaps in employer coverage for rural workforce |
The economic picture isn't entirely rosy. A 2.6% unemployment rate sounds remarkable — and it is — but labor force participation at 60% suggests a substantial working-age population sitting outside the formal economy entirely, likely tied to agricultural seasonality, disability (13.2%), or caregiving. The 19% population aged 65 and older hints at the demographic pressure familiar to rural Illinois: an aging base that strains local services even as younger families remain present (25.5% under 18 suggests the county isn't emptying out the way many rural peers are).
The limited English-speaking population at 17.8% is striking for a county this size, almost certainly reflecting agricultural labor — meatpacking, dairy, and row-crop operations that draw workers to rural Illinois towns. It's a reminder that even deep-rural Midwest communities are more economically layered than their exteriors suggest.
What makes Moultrie County unique for homebuyers? It's one of the last remaining pockets of rural Illinois where strong income-to-price ratios, high homeownership rates, and extremely low rent burden combine into a genuinely buyer-friendly market — even after a significant appreciation spike. The lifestyle (small-town, agricultural, community-oriented) is the trade-off, not the price.
Is Moultrie County's 22.5% price jump sustainable? Probably not at that pace, but the county's extreme affordability relative to income provides a buffer. Unlike overheated markets where appreciation outran wages, Moultrie's median home still costs less than 2.5x median household income, meaning even significant gains haven't structurally broken the market for local buyers.
What's the rental market like in Moultrie County? Lean and affordable. With a median rent of $773 and a rent burden of 28.7% — just below the 30% stress threshold — renters here aren't being squeezed the way urban Illinois tenants are. Only 22.6% of households rent, so the pool is small and inventory limited, but the price pressure isn't severe.
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