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Hampshire County sits at a fascinating contradiction. It's home to one of the most educated populations in the United States — more than half of adult residents hold a bachelor's or graduate degree — yet a quarter of its renters are severely cost-burdened, spending more than half their income on housing. This is what happens when academic prestige and housing supply collide in a geographically constrained New England valley.
The Five College Consortium — UMass Amherst, Amherst College, Hampshire College, Mount Holyoke, and Smith College — is the gravitational center of everything here. These institutions explain the county's unusually high graduate degree attainment (26.6%, far above the Massachusetts average), the relatively low median age of 38.7, and a school enrollment rate of 33.4% that would be remarkable anywhere else. They also explain the labor force participation rate of just 61.5%, which sounds alarming until you account for a population thick with students and retirees.
The number that should be making local headlines is the rent burden figure: 49.5% of Hampshire County renters are cost-burdened, and 25.1% — one in four — are severely burdened. The national threshold for rent burden is 30% of income, and Hampshire County blows past it. Median rent of $1,332 is not outlandish compared to Boston's orbit, but when you're a graduate student on a stipend or a service worker keeping Northampton's restaurant economy running, it's crushing.
This pressure is intensifying. Home prices surged 13.1% year-over-year, one of the strongest appreciation rates in the region, pushing the median sale price to $339,000. That's not a bargain market — the price-to-income ratio sits comfortably above the 4x national benchmark — but it's also nowhere near the stratospheric unaffordability of Eastern Massachusetts. The wide price spread (P10 at $128,000, P90 at $675,000) reflects a genuinely bifurcated market: aging rural farmhouses on one end, walkable Northampton Victorians on the other.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| YoY Price Change | +13.1% | Among the strongest in Western MA |
| Severe Rent Burden | 25.1% | 1 in 4 renters spending 50%+ on housing |
| Graduate Degree Rate | 26.6% | Roughly 2x the national average |
| Homeownership Rate | 68.8% | Above state average, reflects older population |
Walk down King Street in Northampton and then drive twenty minutes to Pelham or Worthington, and you begin to understand the county's internal split. The urban corridor — Northampton, Amherst, Easthampton — is dense, politically engaged, culturally vibrant, and increasingly expensive. The rural hill towns are aging, affordable, and grappling with their own quiet depopulation. The median year built of 1971 masks housing stock that ranges from mid-century colonial subdivisions to 18th-century farmsteads.
Work-from-home adoption at 16.5% is meaningful here: remote workers who fled Pioneer Valley cities during COVID have been a real force driving rural property values upward, bringing Eastern Mass purchasing power to a market not priced for it.
What makes Hampshire County unique? Hampshire County is defined by its Five College Consortium, one of the most concentrated clusters of higher education in the country. This shapes nearly every aspect of the local economy, housing market, and demographics — from the unusually high educational attainment to the persistent renter stress caused by student and academic housing demand outpacing supply.
Is Hampshire County affordable compared to the rest of Massachusetts? It depends on who you are. For homebuyers comparing it to the Greater Boston market, Hampshire County looks relatively accessible. For renters — especially those without academic institution salaries — it's quietly becoming a crisis, with nearly half of all renters cost-burdened and prices appreciating at double-digit rates annually.
Why is the unemployment rate higher than surrounding areas? At 5.1%, Hampshire County's unemployment rate reflects a structural quirk: the large student and part-time academic population inflates the labor pool denominator while also suppressing consistent full-time employment figures. It's less a sign of economic distress and more a byproduct of living in a place where higher education is the primary industry.
With 99,129 properties tracked, Hampshire County is a major real estate market.
With an average price of $371,649, Hampshire County offers mid-range housing options.
Buyers can expect to pay around $185 per square foot in this market.
Home prices in Hampshire County are 25% lower than the Massachusetts average.
| Metric | Hampshire County | Massachusetts Avg | vs State |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $371,649 | $497,275 | -25% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 2,011 | 1,785 | +13% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $185 | $279 | -34% |
| Properties | 99,129 | 3,269,679 | -97% |
Based on property sales data from the last 18 months
The average home price in Hampshire County, MA is $371,649, based on analysis of 99,129 properties in our database.
Our database includes 99,129 properties in Hampshire County, MA, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Hampshire County, MA is $185. This is calculated from an average home price of $371,649 and average size of 2,011 square feet.
Homes in Hampshire County, MA average 2,011 square feet, with an average price of $371,649.
Hampshire County, MA is one of 14 counties in Massachusetts with property data available. Browse other counties to compare market conditions and pricing.
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