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There's a running joke in Kansas real estate circles that the best-kept secret in the state isn't a hidden gem neighborhood in Johnson County — it's everything east of Wichita. Butler County sits immediately to the east of Kansas's largest city, and the numbers reveal a community that has quietly threaded an enviable needle: solid incomes, rock-bottom home prices, and a lifestyle that suburban America keeps promising but rarely delivers.
At $199,600, the median home value here is barely 62% of the national figure of $320,000 — and yet households are earning above the national median. That produces a price-to-income ratio hovering around 2.5x, less than two-thirds of the already-stretched 4x national benchmark. For buyers fleeing the coasts or even the overheated Kansas City suburbs to the northeast, Butler County reads almost like a spreadsheet error. It isn't.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Value | $199,600 | 62% of the $320,000 national median |
| Price-to-Income Ratio | ~2.5x | vs. 4x national benchmark |
| Homeownership Rate | 78.2% | well above national avg of ~65% |
| Severe Rent Burden | 23.1% | 23% of renters paying 50%+ of income on rent |
A 78.2% homeownership rate is extraordinary by any measure. Nearly four in five households own their home — a figure more commonly associated with retirement communities or rural farmstead counties. Here, it reflects something different: a working-age population (median age of 38.3, with a full quarter of residents under 18) that can actually afford to buy. The single-family home share of 79.7% reinforces this — Butler County is built for owners, not renters.
That creates a complicated picture for the county's rental minority. With only 21.8% of households renting, inventory is thin and demand concentrated. The median rent of $984 sounds modest, but a 43% aggregate rent burden — and a severe rent burden rate of 23.1% — suggests that for renters without pathways to ownership, the county's affordability story doesn't fully apply. This is a place that rewards the transition into ownership, but can trap those who can't make it.
With a population density of just 48 people per square mile, Butler County is unambiguously rural in character. Public transit use is essentially zero (0.1%), and 81.7% of workers drive alone — both figures you'd expect from a county where El Dorado, the county seat, and the smaller communities of Augusta and Andover are separated by open prairie. What's notable is that 88.6% broadband access and 95.6% computer access suggest the county is better-wired than its density might suggest, a quiet infrastructure win that supports the 8.3% working from home.
Why are home prices so low compared to incomes? Butler County benefits from abundant land, a low cost of local government, and proximity to Wichita without the premium that comes with being in Wichita. The economics of prairie development — where land is plentiful and construction costs are lower — keep prices anchored in ways that simply aren't possible in denser metro counties.
Is Butler County part of the Wichita metro? Yes — the Wichita Metropolitan Statistical Area includes Butler County, which means residents get access to Wichita's employment base (aerospace manufacturing, healthcare, Koch Industries' home base) while living in a lower-cost, lower-density environment. It's a classic bedroom-county dynamic that's working unusually well here.
What's the catch? The 14.8% disability rate and relatively low labor force participation of 62.1% hint at a county with pockets of economic hardship that the headline numbers obscure. The child poverty rate of 12.3% — higher than the adult rate — points to concentrated stress among younger families. Butler County's affordability is real, but it isn't uniformly experienced.
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