Anderson County, KY
Property Data

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

Total Properties

14,115

Average Home Price

$297,504

Average Square Feet

1,688

Price per Sq Ft

$183

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
13,72613,726

DistributionTotal Properties

No data available

Property

Total Properties

14,115

Median Home Price

$250,000

Average Home Price

$297,504

Average Square Feet

1,688

Price per Sq Ft

$183

Recent Sales (12mo)

194

YoY Price Change

-0.0%

Sales Velocity

57.7%

Anderson County, Kentucky: Bourbon Country's Quiet Bedroom Community Faces a Market Correction

Tucked between Frankfort and Lexington along the Kentucky River, Anderson County doesn't often make headlines — but its real estate data tells a quietly compelling story. This is a county where homeownership is remarkably high, rents are still modest by any national standard, and yet a sharp price correction is now underway that deserves close attention.

The headline number is hard to ignore: home prices dropped 8.5% year-over-year, one of the more pronounced single-year declines you'll find in a Kentucky county that isn't dealing with obvious population flight. Anderson County is growing, slowly and steadily, drawing workers who commute into Frankfort (the state capital sits just 12 miles west) and Lexington's expanding economy. So what's driving the pullback? Likely a combination of rising interest rates squeezing buyers out of the $235,000–$465,000 range that defines the market's upper half, and a modest inventory correction after pandemic-era demand inflated prices on the county's stock of 1990s-era single-family homes. With a median build year of 1996 and average square footage around 1,650, these are solidly suburban homes — not luxury product, not fixer-uppers.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$235,000well below national median of $320,000
YoY Price Change-8.5%notable correction in an otherwise stable region
Homeownership Rate77.9%far above national average of ~65%
Rent Burden Rate51.1%renters paying well above 30% threshold

The Renter Paradox

Here's the surprising tension in Anderson County's housing story: while owners are doing well — sitting on affordable mortgages with a 77.9% ownership rate that rivals the most ownership-heavy counties in the South — renters are quietly struggling. The median rent of $870 sounds like a bargain in absolute terms, but against local incomes, it's punishing. More than half of renters are cost-burdened, and nearly a quarter face severe rent burden. In a county where the public transit system is essentially nonexistent (0.0% of workers use it) and 81.6% drive alone to work, renters without reliable transportation face compounding financial stress.

This bifurcation — asset-rich owners, squeezed renters — is increasingly common in rural and exurban Kentucky, but Anderson County exemplifies it sharply.

Education and the Labor Market

With only 17.4% of residents holding a bachelor's degree and a labor force participation rate of 59.5% (notably below the national norm), Anderson County reflects the economic profile of Kentucky's inner Bluegrass region: skilled trades, government employment in Frankfort, and agriculture tied to the bourbon industry that defines this corridor. The county's 2.6% unemployment rate is genuinely low — a sign that those who are in the labor force are finding work, even if the workforce itself is constrained by disability rates (18.6%) and caregiving obligations typical of an aging population with a median age of 42.


FAQs

What makes Anderson County, Kentucky unique? Anderson County sits in the heart of Kentucky's Bourbon Trail — Lawrenceburg, the county seat, is home to Wild Turkey and Four Roses distilleries. This gives the local economy a distinctive character: a mix of state government workers commuting to Frankfort, distillery employees, and longtime farming families, creating a community that's more economically diverse than its small size suggests.

Is Anderson County a good place to buy a home right now? The 8.5% price drop may actually create a buying opportunity for those priced out during the 2021–2023 run-up. With median prices around $235,000 and a price-to-income ratio well under 4x, affordability fundamentals remain solid — making this a market worth watching for value-oriented buyers willing to commute into Lexington or Frankfort.

Why are renters so cost-burdened in an affordable county? Anderson County's rental market is thin — only about 22% of housing units are renter-occupied — which limits supply and keeps rents elevated relative to local renter incomes. With few apartments and little new rental construction, renters compete for a small pool of single-family rentals in a market built overwhelmingly for owners.

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