Lake County, IN
Property Data

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

Total Properties

316,434

Average Home Price

$211,225

Average Square Feet

3,402

Price per Sq Ft

$137

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
29638,438

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

316,434

Median Home Price

$190,000

Average Home Price

$211,225

Average Square Feet

3,402

Price per Sq Ft

$137

Recent Sales (12mo)

778

YoY Price Change

-10.0%

Sales Velocity

52.3%

Lake County, Indiana: Chicago's Shadow, Its Own Story

There's a real estate paradox at the heart of Lake County, Indiana. Sitting on the southern shore of Lake Michigan, directly adjacent to one of the most expensive metro areas in North America, this county of nearly 500,000 people somehow maintains median home prices around $159,000 — less than half the national median and a fraction of what buyers would pay just across the Illinois state line. That gap is not an accident. It's the product of decades of industrial decline, demographic pressure, and a persistent identity crisis between Gary's post-steel legacy and the quietly suburban communities of Crown Point, Munster, and St. John that have flourished in its shadow.

The Chicago Arbitrage Play

For commuters willing to trade a Chicago address for dramatically lower housing costs, Lake County has long been an open secret. The median home value of $214,700 — roughly 67% of the national benchmark — buys you a single-family home in a mature neighborhood within Metra and South Shore Line commuting distance. With 71.5% of the housing stock being single-family and a homeownership rate of 70.9% (well above the national norm), this is fundamentally a homeowning county. The problem is that the arbitrage story has its limits: a year-over-year price decline of -3.5% suggests the demand isn't robust enough to sustain appreciation, even as metros across the Midwest have posted gains.

The Gary Effect

The county's statistics carry the unmistakable weight of Gary, Indiana — once a steel boomtown and now one of the most economically distressed mid-sized cities in the Midwest. The median year built of 1956 tells that story concisely: this is aging housing stock from an era when US Steel employment made Lake County a destination. Today, an unemployment rate of 6.3% (well above the national average) and a poverty rate of 14.6% — with child poverty hitting a stark 21.5% — reflect the long hangover from deindustrialization. The Gini index of 0.455 signals meaningful income inequality, which makes sense for a county where Hammond, East Chicago, and Gary exist alongside wealthier incorporated suburbs.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$159,000Less than half the $320,000 national median
Rent Burden Rate45.4%Far exceeds the 30% threshold; 24% face severe burden
YoY Price Change-3.5%Declining while most Midwest markets hold or grow
Child Poverty Rate21.5%Nearly 1 in 4 children — a generational affordability crisis

The Renter Squeeze in a Homeowner County

Perhaps the most alarming data point: despite a median rent of just $1,094 — reasonable by any coastal standard — 45.4% of renters are cost-burdened, with nearly one in four facing severe burden. That's a distinctly local phenomenon. Rents are low in absolute terms, but so are incomes, particularly in the county's urban core. For the 29% of households who rent, affordable doesn't mean affordable enough.


What makes Lake County, Indiana unique? It's one of the most affordable counties in a major U.S. metro area — the Chicago metro — yet it faces some of the region's deepest economic challenges. The combination of low prices, high homeownership, and significant poverty in the same geography is rare and reflects a county in a decades-long transition from heavy industry to something not yet fully defined.

Is Lake County, Indiana a good place to buy a home right now? The low entry prices are real, and homeownership rates suggest residents do build equity here over time. However, declining values (-3.5% YoY), a 10.6% vacancy rate, and aging housing stock mean buyers should approach selectively — the southern and eastern suburbs offer stronger appreciation potential than the urban core.

Why are rents so burdensome if they seem low? Lake County's median income of $68,985 looks adequate on paper, but that figure is pulled up by higher-earning suburban households. In Gary and East Chicago, per capita incomes are significantly lower, meaning even a $1,094 median rent consumes a disproportionate share of actual take-home pay for the county's most vulnerable renters.

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