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Baltimore County is one of the more quietly complicated places in American real estate — a large, doughnut-shaped jurisdiction that completely encircles Baltimore City without containing it, home to nearly 850,000 people who live in everything from the working-class rowhouse neighborhoods of Dundalk and Essex to the horse-country estates of the Greenspring Valley. Understanding the county means understanding that it is not one place, but many — and the data reflects that tension beautifully.
The distance between this county's 10th and 90th percentile home prices — $175,000 to $760,000 — is one of the widest spreads you'll find in any Maryland jurisdiction, and it's not an accident. That range maps almost directly onto geography: older industrial waterfront communities in the southeast, modest postwar subdivisions in the middle rings, and leafy affluent enclaves like Ruxton and Towson to the north. The median home built in 1969 tells its own story — this is a county shaped by the postwar suburban boom, and much of its housing stock has the bones of that era.
At $355,800 median sale price and $233 per square foot, the county sits just slightly above the national median home value of $320,000 — a surprisingly modest premium for a jurisdiction bordering a major East Coast metro and sitting within commuting distance of Washington, D.C. That relative affordability compared to peer suburbs in Northern Virginia or Montgomery County has historically made Baltimore County attractive to federal workers, healthcare professionals anchored to the University of Maryland Medical System, and employees of the NSA and Social Security Administration campuses nearby.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $355,800 | Just above the $320K national median |
| Rent Burden Rate | 49.5% | Far exceeds the 30% burden threshold |
| Homeownership Rate | 66.3% | Comfortably above the national ~65% rate |
| YoY Price Change | +3.4% | Steady, not spectacular |
Here's the sharpest tension in the data: Baltimore County has a solid 66.3% homeownership rate, yet nearly half of all renters are spending more than 30% of their income on housing — and a full quarter are severely rent-burdened. With a median rent of $1,566 and a child poverty rate of 12.7% running notably above the overall poverty rate of 10%, the county's rental market is quietly punishing families at the lower end of the income spectrum even as homeowners build equity in a stable, appreciating market.
The limited English-speaking population at 14.2% — higher than many suburban Maryland counties — points to significant immigrant communities, particularly in Catonsville, Rosedale, and areas around Owings Mills, many of whom are concentrated in the rental market and disproportionately exposed to that burden.
A median household income of $90,904 — more than $15,000 above the national benchmark — coexists with a bachelor's degree attainment rate of just 23.1%, which is surprisingly modest for a county of this income level. The explanation lies in the county's employment base: significant concentrations in healthcare, logistics, skilled trades, and government work that pay middle-class wages without necessarily requiring a four-year degree. The 14.2% work-from-home rate also suggests a meaningful professional-class presence that arrived or solidified post-pandemic, likely adding upward pressure on the market's upper tier.
What makes Baltimore County unique in Maryland's real estate market? Baltimore County's defining quirk is its geographic and economic diversity within a single jurisdiction. Unlike most suburban counties, it has no incorporated municipalities of significant size — Towson, the county seat, is technically unincorporated — which means zoning and development decisions happen at the county level across communities with wildly different characters. That produces the extraordinary price range ($175K to $760K) and a housing mix that includes everything from dense apartment corridors to rural acreage.
Is Baltimore County more affordable than the D.C. suburbs? Significantly so. Comparable homes in Montgomery County or Fairfax County routinely sell for 40-70% more than in Baltimore County, and the commute to federal employment hubs is only marginally longer for many workers. That gap has made the county a consistent destination for cost-conscious buyers priced out of D.C.-adjacent markets, and it's one reason appreciation has remained steady rather than explosive — demand exists, but the ceiling is anchored by the comparison.
Are home prices rising in Baltimore County? At 3.4% year-over-year appreciation, the market is healthy but measured — not the kind of runaway growth seen in Sun Belt metros. That stability is actually a selling point for long-term buyers: the county hasn't overheated, vacancy sits at a manageable 5.8%, and the strong homeownership base provides a floor against sharp corrections.
Baltimore County is one of the largest real estate markets with over 307,683 properties in our database.
Properties in Baltimore County average $526,160, reflecting a competitive market.
The price per square foot of $294 reflects strong property valuations in this area.
Home prices in Baltimore County are 6% lower than the Maryland average.
| Metric | Baltimore County | Maryland Avg | vs State |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $526,160 | $562,667 | -6% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 1,787 | 1,916 | -7% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $294 | $294 | Same |
| Properties | 307,683 | 2,504,783 | -88% |
Based on property sales data from the last 18 months
The average home price in Baltimore County, MD is $526,160, based on analysis of 307,683 properties in our database.
Our database includes 307,683 properties in Baltimore County, MD, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Baltimore County, MD is $294. This is calculated from an average home price of $526,160 and average size of 1,787 square feet.
Homes in Baltimore County, MD average 1,787 square feet, with an average price of $526,160.
Baltimore County, MD is one of 24 counties in Maryland with property data available. Browse other counties to compare market conditions and pricing.
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