Randolph County, IN
Property Data

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

Total Properties

22,584

Average Home Price

$113,281

Average Square Feet

1,917

Price per Sq Ft

$78

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
2626,487

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

22,584

Median Home Price

$102,500

Average Home Price

$113,281

Average Square Feet

1,917

Price per Sq Ft

$78

Recent Sales (12mo)

28

YoY Price Change

29.0%

Sales Velocity

100.0%

Randolph County, Indiana: Affordable on Paper, Stressed Underneath

At $62 per square foot, Randolph County offers some of the cheapest housing in the Midwest — a number that would look surreal to buyers in Columbus or Indianapolis, let alone anyone priced out of a coastal market. The median home here sells for around $79,000, roughly a quarter of the national median, and nearly eight in ten residents own their homes. On the surface, this looks like a affordability success story. Look closer, and a more complicated picture emerges.

The Affordability Paradox

The price-to-income ratio in Randolph County is genuinely low — well under 2x median household income, versus a national benchmark of 4x. That should mean financial breathing room. But with a poverty rate of 15% and a child poverty rate climbing to nearly 22%, affordability relative to income only matters if incomes are sufficient to begin with. When SNAP benefits reach 15.3% of households and rent burden hits 42.1% — far above the standard 30% threshold — it signals that a significant share of residents are stretched thin even at these modest price points. Nearly 18% of renters face severe rent burden, meaning housing is consuming more than half their take-home pay.

This is the paradox of rural Indiana affordability: the homes are cheap, but the economy is leaner still.

An Aging, Established Community

Randolph County sits in east-central Indiana, bordering Ohio, anchored by the small city of Winchester. Agriculture and light manufacturing have long defined the local economy, and the demographic profile reflects decades of that steady, unglamorous rhythm. The median age of 42.1 skews older than the national average, and one in five residents is 65 or older — a share that will only grow. Just 14.4% of adults hold a bachelor's degree or higher, roughly half the national rate, and labor force participation at 59.3% is notably low.

The county's housing stock tells the same story: a median year built of 1952 means most homes are approaching or past 70 years old. With a 10.7% vacancy rate and only 10 recent sales recorded in the dataset, this is not a market defined by turnover or investment activity. It's a place where people stay put.

A 10% Price Drop Worth Watching

The year-over-year price decline of 10.4% stands out. In a national environment where most markets have held firm or appreciated, a double-digit drop in a rural county suggests softening demand rather than any external shock. Out-migration from small Indiana counties has been a documented trend for years, and when the buyer pool shrinks, even modestly priced homes struggle to hold value.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$79,038~25% of national median ($320,000)
Rent Burden Rate42.1%well above 30% threshold
YoY Price Change-10.4%bucking national appreciation trends
Homeownership Rate77.5%significantly above national norm

What makes Randolph County unique? Its homeownership rate of 77.5% is remarkably high by any standard — yet the county simultaneously shows elevated poverty, rent burden, and SNAP usage. It's a community where owning a home is accessible but economic security is not guaranteed, a distinction that gets lost when affordability is measured by price alone.

Is Randolph County a good place to buy a home right now? For cash buyers or investors seeking rock-bottom entry prices, the numbers are compelling — $40,000 gets you into the bottom decile of the market. But with falling prices, an aging population, and limited employment drivers, appreciation prospects are modest at best. It's a market for those putting down roots, not chasing returns.

Why are rents so burdensome if housing is so cheap? Median rent of $741/month sounds low in absolute terms, but against median incomes in a county with a 15% poverty rate and significant underemployment, it consumes an outsized share of household budgets. Rental affordability is an income problem as much as a housing problem.

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