Fountain County, IN
Property Data

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

Total Properties

18,469

Average Home Price

$176,236

Average Square Feet

1,908

Price per Sq Ft

$110

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
2036,029

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

18,469

Median Home Price

$156,900

Average Home Price

$176,236

Average Square Feet

1,908

Price per Sq Ft

$110

Recent Sales (12mo)

35

YoY Price Change

1.3%

Sales Velocity

-23.9%

Fountain County, Indiana: Affordable Heartland, But at What Cost?

Tucked into the western edge of Indiana along the Illinois border, Fountain County is the kind of place that rarely makes headlines — and that's partly the point. With just 16,500 residents spread across 42 people per square mile, this is agricultural Indiana at its most elemental: rolling Wabash River bottomlands, small towns like Covington and Veedersburg, and a housing market that would look like a fever dream to anyone priced out of a coastal metro. At $109 per square foot, you can buy a home here for what it costs to rent a parking space in Chicago for a year.

But the headline number demands attention: a -17.3% year-over-year price decline is striking even by rural Indiana standards, and it warrants careful interpretation. With only 9 recorded sales in the past 12 months across a very thin dataset of tracked properties, this figure reflects the volatility of small-sample markets more than a true freefall. A single outlier transaction in a county this size can swing the median dramatically. That said, it's also not nothing — rural counties across the Midwest have faced genuine headwinds from aging housing stock (the median build year here is 1956), population stagnation, and an accelerating brain drain.

A Housing Market Built for Owners, Not Investors

The ownership story here is genuinely strong. With a 74.7% homeownership rate — well above the national figure hovering around 65% — Fountain County is a place where people plant roots. Renters, meanwhile, are largely insulated from crisis: the median rent of $837 sits far below the national average, and the rent burden rate of 27.9% actually falls below the standard 30% stress threshold. That's a rarity in today's rental market, where burden rates above 35% have become commonplace even in mid-tier cities.

The Education and Workforce Gap

The data's most telling tension lives in the education numbers. Only 8.5% of residents hold a bachelor's degree — roughly one-third the national average — and just 5.2% hold graduate degrees. Meanwhile, 44% of adults completed high school as their terminal credential. This isn't a moral judgment; it's a structural one. Counties with this educational profile tend to struggle attracting the diversified employers that anchor long-term wage growth, and Fountain County's labor force participation rate of 61.9% reflects that constraint.

The disability rate of 18.5% is also meaningfully elevated, consistent with patterns seen across rural Indiana counties where manufacturing legacies and limited healthcare access intersect.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$162,500less than half the national median of $320,000
Homeownership Rate74.7%well above national avg of ~65%
YoY Price Change-17.3%reflects thin market; only 9 sales recorded
Bachelor's Degree Rate8.5%roughly 3x below national average

FAQs

What makes Fountain County, Indiana unique? Fountain County combines some of Indiana's most affordable housing with an unusually high homeownership rate, creating a community of deeply rooted residents. Its position along the Wabash River gives it agricultural identity and scenic value, but its thin real estate market means prices can swing dramatically from year to year — making standard market comparisons unreliable.

Is Fountain County a good place to buy a home? For buyers seeking low entry costs and stable rural living, yes — $109 per square foot and a median price under $165,000 offers extraordinary value by any national benchmark. The caution: resale liquidity is limited, homes are older (average built 1956), and price appreciation has historically been modest. It's a lifestyle buy more than an investment vehicle.

Why is the year-over-year price change so negative? With only 9 home sales recorded in the past year, Fountain County's market is too thin for reliable trend data. A single high-value or low-value transaction can move the median by tens of thousands of dollars. The -17.3% figure should be read as statistical noise within a very illiquid market, not evidence of a collapse.

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