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There's a particular irony embedded in Caroline County's housing data. This small, rural Maryland county — tucked between the Choptank River and the Delaware border on the Delmarva Peninsula — offers some of the most genuinely affordable home prices in a state where the median home easily clears $400,000. Yet the renters who can't access that ownership ladder are being quietly crushed. A 51.3% rent burden rate means the average Caroline County renter is spending more than half their paycheck on housing — a figure that rivals the most stressed urban rental markets in the country, all within a county where the median home costs just $272,400.
That paradox is the central story here.
With a 71.9% homeownership rate — well above both the Maryland and national averages — Caroline County looks stable on the surface. Three out of four housing units are single-family homes, and home values sit roughly 15% below the national median, making this one of the few Maryland counties where a working-class family could theoretically still afford to buy. The price-to-income ratio of about 4.1x is almost exactly at the national benchmark, a rarity in the Mid-Atlantic.
But the income side of the equation tells a harder story. At $66,368, median household income trails the national figure by nearly $9,000, and the educational foundation that typically drives income growth is thin — only 10.2% of residents hold a bachelor's degree, compared to roughly 35% nationally. Nearly 16% of adults never completed high school. The county's largest employers have historically been in agriculture, food processing (Perdue Farms has deep roots across the Delmarva), and light manufacturing — industries that provide steady but modest wages.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Value | $272,400 | ~32% below Maryland state median |
| Rent Burden Rate | 51.3% | Nearly double the 30% threshold for housing stress |
| Bachelor's Degree Rate | 10.2% | vs ~35% nationally — among Maryland's lowest |
| Child Poverty Rate | 18.5% | Significantly above the 12.4% overall poverty rate |
The split between homeowners and renters here is stark in a way that rarely gets discussed in rural affordability conversations. Owners are largely insulated — low prices, high ownership rates, minimal mortgage stress. But Caroline County's 28% renter population is disproportionately bearing the weight of limited rental inventory, modest wages, and a near-absence of public transit (just 0.5% of commuters). With 20.5% of renters in severe rent burden — spending over 50% of income on rent — and 17.5% of households on SNAP benefits, the safety net is working overtime.
The 9.9% vacancy rate suggests this isn't a supply crisis in the traditional sense. The problem is structural: renters can't generate the savings to convert to ownership in a market where even "affordable" prices require financial footing that low-wage employment doesn't provide.
What makes Caroline County, Maryland unique? Caroline County is one of Maryland's last genuinely affordable rural counties, with home prices and ownership rates that look almost anachronistic compared to the rest of the Mid-Atlantic. Its Eastern Shore identity — agricultural roots, Choptank River geography, proximity to both the Chesapeake Bay watershed and the Delaware state line — keeps it outside the gravitational pull of DC and Baltimore sprawl, preserving affordability but also limiting economic mobility.
Is Caroline County a good place to buy a home? For buyers who can qualify for a mortgage, Caroline County offers rare value in Maryland — median prices around $272,400, high single-family home inventory, and a price-to-income ratio near the national benchmark. The catch is that local wages are modest, so buyers relocating remotely with outside income are better positioned than those relying on local employment.
Why is rent so expensive relative to incomes in Caroline County? Despite low home prices, rental housing in Caroline County is scarce and not proportionally cheap. With limited new construction targeting renters, a thin transit network, and wages anchored to agriculture and light industry, renters face a market where competition for available units pushes costs well beyond what local incomes can comfortably absorb.
Caroline County has 16,935 properties in our comprehensive database.
With an average price of $305,297, Caroline County offers mid-range housing options.
Buyers can expect to pay around $159 per square foot in this market.
Home prices in Caroline County are 46% lower than the Maryland average.
| Metric | Caroline County | Maryland Avg | vs State |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $305,297 | $562,667 | -46% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 1,926 | 1,916 | +1% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $159 | $294 | -46% |
| Properties | 16,935 | 2,504,783 | -99% |
Based on property sales data from the last 18 months
The average home price in Caroline County, MD is $305,297, based on analysis of 16,935 properties in our database.
Our database includes 16,935 properties in Caroline County, MD, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Caroline County, MD is $159. This is calculated from an average home price of $305,297 and average size of 1,926 square feet.
Homes in Caroline County, MD average 1,926 square feet, with an average price of $305,297.
Caroline 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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