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There's a particular kind of affluence that doesn't announce itself loudly, and Calvert County is a masterclass in it. Tucked between the Chesapeake Bay to the east and the Patuxent River to the west — a narrow peninsula about an hour south of Washington, D.C. — this 345-square-mile county has quietly assembled one of the most economically stable profiles of any jurisdiction in the mid-Atlantic. A poverty rate of just 4.0% against a national average hovering near 12.5%, and an unemployment rate of 2.9% in an era when many communities still wrestle with structural joblessness: these aren't accidents. They're the cumulative result of federal proximity, deliberate community character, and geography that functions like a natural moat.
The single biggest force shaping Calvert County's economy is invisible on any map: the gravitational pull of the Washington-Baltimore metro's federal employment complex. Naval Air Station Patuxent River — just over the county line in neighboring St. Mary's County — anchors thousands of defense contractor and government jobs within commuting range. The county's veteran population at nearly 11% reflects this military-adjacent identity. Meanwhile, a 16.4% work-from-home rate, well above pre-pandemic norms, suggests that a significant cohort of residents are D.C.-area knowledge workers who traded urban apartments for Chesapeake waterfront and kept their salaries. That dynamic powerfully explains the $132,059 median household income — nearly 1.76x the national median.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Household Income | $132,059 | 1.76x the national median of $75,149 |
| Homeownership Rate | 87.2% | Among the highest in the state; national avg is ~65% |
| YoY Price Change | +8.1% | Outpacing most of the mid-Atlantic in 2024 |
| Rent Burden | 46.2% | Severely stressed — well above the 30% threshold |
Here's the counterintuitive story buried inside all this affluence: Calvert County is an extraordinarily difficult place to rent. With renters comprising just 12.8% of occupied housing, the county is almost entirely owner-occupied single-family homes — 86.7% of the housing stock fits that description. That scarcity creates brutal economics for the small minority who do rent. A median rent of $1,701 combined with a 46.2% rent burden rate and a 23.4% severe rent burden rate means nearly one in four renters is spending more than half their income on housing. This isn't a community built for renters, and the market price-signals are unambiguous about that.
Unlike coastal California or Austin's overheated corridors, Calvert County's 8.1% year-over-year price appreciation hasn't yet crossed into full-blown affordability crisis territory for owners. A $450,000 median home price against a $132,059 household income yields a price-to-income ratio of roughly 3.4x — actually below the national 4x benchmark. For a county with bay-access appeal and D.C. proximity, that's a genuine value proposition. The P10 entry price of $250,000 suggests that working-class buyers still have a foothold, even if it's narrowing.
What makes Calvert County unique? Calvert County is one of the wealthiest and most owner-dominated counties in Maryland, shaped by its peninsula geography on the Chesapeake Bay, proximity to federal defense employment, and a strong culture of single-family homeownership. Its combination of low poverty, low unemployment, and high income is exceptional even within affluent suburban Maryland.
Is Calvert County affordable to buy a home in? Surprisingly, yes — relative to income. The price-to-income ratio sits around 3.4x, below the national benchmark of 4x, meaning buyers who earn county-typical wages face less strain than peers in comparable D.C.-area suburbs. The challenge is the entry price: even the lower end of the market starts around $250,000, and inventory remains tight with fewer than 36,000 total housing units serving a nearly 94,000-person population.
Why are renters so financially stressed in Calvert County despite high incomes? The county's housing stock was built almost entirely for owners — over 86% single-family homes, just 12.8% renter-occupied. That scarcity means landlords face almost no competitive pressure, and renters — who tend to earn less than the county's high-income homeowner majority — are left absorbing rents calibrated to a market that barely acknowledges their existence.
Calvert County has 43,833 properties in our comprehensive database.
Properties in Calvert County average $509,401, reflecting a competitive market.
The price per square foot of $254 reflects strong property valuations in this area.
Home prices in Calvert County are 9% lower than the Maryland average.
| Metric | Calvert County | Maryland Avg | vs State |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $509,401 | $562,667 | -9% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 2,004 | 1,916 | +5% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $254 | $294 | -14% |
| Properties | 43,833 | 2,504,783 | -98% |
Based on property sales data from the last 18 months
The average home price in Calvert County, MD is $509,401, based on analysis of 43,833 properties in our database.
Our database includes 43,833 properties in Calvert County, MD, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Calvert County, MD is $254. This is calculated from an average home price of $509,401 and average size of 2,004 square feet.
Homes in Calvert County, MD average 2,004 square feet, with an average price of $509,401.
Calvert 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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