125 East
Geneva, IN 46740
Adams County
011135300008600017
40.576361, -84.908734
County context
Adams County sits in northeast Indiana's flat agricultural expanse, anchored by the small city of Decatur, and it punches above its weight in ways the housing data only partially captures. This is Amish country — one of Indiana's most concentrated Amish communities calls Adams County home — and that cultural reality ripples through virtually every data point on this page in ways that demand context before any number is taken at face value.
At $150,000 median home price and $111 per square foot, Adams County is genuinely, not performatively, affordable. Homes here cost less than half the Indiana state median and less than half the national benchmark of $320,000. With a median household income of $63,128 — roughly 84% of the national figure — the price-to-income ratio sits comfortably under 3x, a level that hasn't existed in most American metros since the early 2000s. For working families priced out of Fort Wayne to the west or South Bend to the north, Adams County represents a rare viable alternative.
The 82.2% homeownership rate underscores this point dramatically. When nearly five in six households own their home in an era of national housing crisis, that's not an accident — it reflects decades of stable, low-cost inventory and a community structure that prizes land ownership deeply.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $150,000 | Under 3x local median income — rare nationally |
| Homeownership Rate | 82.2% | Far above the ~65% national average |
| Uninsured Rate | 23.3% | Nearly double the national average of ~8.5% |
| YoY Price Change | -21.0% | Sharp correction after pandemic-era runup |
The 17.4% limited English rate and 13% of adults with less than a high school diploma are not straightforward markers of educational disadvantage here — they largely reflect the county's substantial Amish population, who traditionally leave formal schooling after 8th grade and speak Pennsylvania Dutch at home. Similarly, the 16.8% rate of households without a vehicle is extraordinary for a rural county with essentially no public transit, and again points to horse-and-buggy households rather than urban poverty. These numbers require local knowledge to interpret honestly.
The 23.3% uninsured rate — nearly triple the national average — follows the same logic. Many Amish communities self-insure through church networks and decline conventional health insurance on religious grounds. It's a genuine data reality, but not the crisis signal it would represent in another context.
Strip away the Amish-driven statistical quirks and some genuinely worrying patterns emerge. The child poverty rate of 16% runs ahead of the overall poverty rate, and nearly 13% of renters face severe rent burden on $799 median monthly rent — modest by any national standard, but stiff against lower incomes in this workforce. Over 20% of households lack broadband internet access, a gap that limits economic mobility for young residents.
The -21% year-over-year price decline is the sharpest headline number and deserves caution: with only 22 recent sales in the dataset, a handful of outlier transactions can swing percentages dramatically. This is a thin, illiquid market by design, not a collapsing one.
What makes Adams County, Indiana unique? Adams County is home to one of Indiana's largest Amish communities, centered around Berne — a city that celebrates its Swiss-German heritage with annual festivals and distinctive architecture. This cultural presence fundamentally shapes the county's demographics, housing patterns, and economic statistics in ways that distinguish it sharply from peer rural Indiana counties.
Is Adams County a good place to buy a home? For buyers seeking genuine affordability and stability, yes. Price-to-income ratios are among the most favorable in the Midwest, homeownership rates are exceptionally high, and housing inventory is dominated by single-family homes. The trade-off is limited appreciation potential, a thin resale market, and modest access to urban amenities and services.
Why is the uninsured rate so high in Adams County? The elevated uninsured rate is largely attributable to the county's large Amish population, which typically opts out of conventional health insurance in favor of community-based mutual aid and church health-sharing arrangements — a practice protected under federal law.
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