Property details·West Lafayette, Tippecanoe County, Indiana·79-07-17-303-008.000-026
1009 Rose Street
West Lafayette, IN 47906
Tippecanoe County
79-07-17-303-008.000-026
40.435803, -86.901686
| Category | Amount | Year |
|---|---|---|
| Tax value | $999.22 | 2026 |
| Market value | $113,200 | 2024 |
| Assessed value | $113,200 | 2026 |
| Building value | $69,400 | — |
| Land value | $43,800 | — |
Values reflect public tax roll data as of the year shown.
County context
Tippecanoe County sits at one of the more interesting demographic intersections in the Midwest: a mid-sized Indiana county anchored by a flagship research university that punches well above its weight in patents, aerospace engineering, and Big Ten athletics — yet the housing market remains stubbornly, almost defiantly, affordable by national standards. With a median home price of $295,000 and a price-per-square-foot of just $171, this is a place where a professor's salary still buys a real house, and where a graduate student's stipend isn't immediately laughable against rental listings.
That university — Purdue — explains almost everything unusual in this dataset.
The median age of 28.8 years is the first tell. Tippecanoe County is dramatically younger than Indiana as a whole (median age: ~38) and nearly a decade younger than the national median. Only 12% of residents are 65 or older, while school enrollment hits a remarkable 39.3% — a figure you'd expect from a college town, not a county of 187,000. Purdue's West Lafayette campus enrolls over 50,000 students, and their statistical fingerprints are everywhere: the relatively low median household income of $58,622 (well below the national $75,149), the high renter share at 46%, and a labor force participation rate of 62.5% that reflects a large population of full-time students who aren't counted as employed.
The income inequality story is also worth pausing on. A Gini index of 0.476 is elevated — higher than Indiana's state average — reflecting the gap between graduate researchers, tenured faculty, and university administrators on one end, and a service-sector workforce and student population on the other.
Here's what's genuinely alarming beneath the affordable-looking home prices: a rent burden rate of 52.4%, meaning the median renter is spending more than half their income on housing. The severe rent burden rate of 27.5% indicates that more than one in four renters is paying over 50% of their income toward rent. With a median rent of $1,088 — modest by coastal standards but steep relative to student and service-worker incomes — this is a slow-moving affordability crisis dressed in Midwest clothing. The 19% poverty rate and 16.2% child poverty rate confirm that this isn't just a student-income statistical artifact; real hardship runs through the non-university population too.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Age | 28.8 years | Nearly 10 years younger than U.S. median — Purdue effect |
| Rent Burden Rate | 52.4% | Nearly double the 30% threshold considered healthy |
| Median Home Price | $295,000 | ~8% below national median; $171/sqft is genuine value |
| Poverty Rate | 19.0% | Above Indiana avg (~13%) despite low unemployment |
What makes Tippecanoe County unique? It's one of the clearest examples in the country of a university reshaping an entire county's demographics. Purdue's presence creates an unusually young, educated, and highly mobile population — which keeps housing demand strong in West Lafayette's core neighborhoods, suppresses median incomes (students count), and inflates income inequality metrics, all simultaneously.
Is now a good time to buy a home in Tippecanoe County? The year-over-year price data shows significant volatility — the dataset reflects a sharp correction in recent sales — but the county's long-term fundamentals are solid. Purdue's continued expansion into applied research, its partnerships with companies like Rolls-Royce and Saab, and Indiana's broader economic growth suggest sustained housing demand. Buyers who can tolerate short-term price swings may find genuine value at $171 per square foot.
Why is poverty high if unemployment is so low? This is the Purdue paradox. Unemployment is just 2.9%, but a large student population lives below the poverty line by income measures while not being "unemployed" in any traditional sense. Combine that with a service economy that pays modest wages, and you get a county that looks employed on paper but financially stressed in practice.
West Lafayette has 22,993 properties in our comprehensive database.
With an average price of $342,062, West Lafayette offers mid-range housing options.
With a price per square foot of just $134, this area offers excellent value for buyers.
Home prices in West Lafayette are 32% higher than the Tippecanoe County average.
| Metric | West Lafayette | Tippecanoe County | vs County |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $342,062 | $258,247 | +32% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 2,544 | 2,194 | +16% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $134 | $118 | +14% |
| Properties | 22,993 | 88,086 | -74% |
Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.
The average home price in West Lafayette, IN is $342,062, based on analysis of 22,993 properties in our database.
Our database includes 22,993 properties in West Lafayette, IN, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in West Lafayette, IN is $134. This is calculated from an average home price of $342,062 and average size of 2,544 square feet.
Homes in West Lafayette, IN average 2,544 square feet, with an average price of $342,062.
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