Frederick County, MD
Property Data

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

Total Properties

126,810

Average Home Price

$626,625

Average Square Feet

2,119

Price per Sq Ft

$264

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
9018,138

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

126,810

Median Home Price

$485,000

Average Home Price

$626,625

Average Square Feet

2,119

Price per Sq Ft

$264

Recent Sales (12mo)

3,119

YoY Price Change

1.7%

Sales Velocity

63.5%

Frederick County, Maryland: The Exurban Goldilocks That's Starting to Feel the Squeeze

Frederick County has long occupied an enviable position in the Mid-Atlantic real estate landscape — far enough from Washington, D.C. to feel genuinely rural in its western reaches, yet close enough to the Beltway corridor to attract the kind of professional households that have made it one of Maryland's most economically robust counties. With a median household income of $120,458 — 60% above the national median — and a poverty rate of just 6.3%, Frederick County looks, on paper, like a community that has figured something out. But a closer reading of the data suggests that the county's exurban bargain is quietly becoming a victim of its own success.

The "Affordable" Label Is Wearing Thin

For years, Frederick was pitched to buyers priced out of Montgomery and Howard counties as the sensible alternative: real square footage (averaging just over 2,000 per home), a median build year of 1997 suggesting well-maintained suburban stock, and a small-town character anchored by a genuinely walkable historic downtown. At a median sale price of $489,050, homes here still undercut Bethesda or Rockville by a wide margin. But affordability is relative, and for renters, the story is considerably grimmer.

A rent burden rate of 45.7% — meaning nearly half of Frederick's renters spend more than 30% of income on housing — stands well above the threshold economists consider sustainable. More striking still: 21.5% of renters are severely burdened, spending over half their income on rent at a median of $1,706 per month. In a county celebrated for its wealth, that statistic lands hard. It suggests a two-tier economy where homeowners (a robust 77% of occupied units) are sitting on appreciating assets while renters — many of them essential workers, younger residents, and service industry employees — are being slowly squeezed out.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$489,050~1.5x national median, but half of D.C. suburb peers
Homeownership Rate77.0%well above national avg of ~65%
Severe Rent Burden21.5%over 1 in 5 renters spending 50%+ on housing
YoY Price Change-0.6%slight cooling after post-pandemic surge

Remote Work's Fingerprints Are Everywhere

A 19.2% work-from-home rate — nearly one in five workers — is not accidental. Frederick became a direct beneficiary of the remote work revolution, absorbing federal contractors, cybersecurity professionals, and biotech workers from the I-270 corridor who no longer needed to commute daily. The county's proximity to Fort Detrick, a major Army installation and home to significant federal biodefense research, also sustains a stable base of government and scientific employment that is largely recession-resistant. This has kept unemployment at a tight 3.4% even as the broader economy has wobbled.

The car dependency is overwhelming — 69.6% drive alone to work — which makes sense given that public transit captures just 1.1% of commuters. Frederick's growth has been built around the automobile, and that calculus won't change without substantial infrastructure investment.

A County in Transition

The slight year-over-year price dip of 0.6% is less alarming than it might appear — it reflects a broader Mid-Atlantic market pause rather than structural weakness. With 44.8% of residents holding a bachelor's degree or higher, a near-universal 96.5% computer access rate, and a vacancy rate of just 4.4%, the fundamentals remain sound. Frederick isn't cooling; it's catching its breath.


What makes Frederick County unique? Frederick sits at a genuine geographic and economic crossroads — between rural Appalachian Maryland and the D.C. metro's suburban sprawl — and its housing market reflects that tension. It offers more space and lower prices than its Montgomery County neighbors, a well-preserved historic core in Frederick City, and a strong employment base anchored by federal and biotech sectors.

Is Frederick County still affordable compared to D.C. suburbs? Relatively, yes — but the window is narrowing for renters. Homeowners enjoy strong equity positions and a below-average price-to-income ratio compared to inner suburbs, but renters face burden rates that rival far more expensive markets, suggesting affordability has already eroded significantly at the lower end.

Why are so many people moving to Frederick County? The combination of remote work flexibility, competitive home sizes, top-rated public schools, and a lower cost of entry versus Montgomery or Howard counties has driven sustained in-migration from the D.C. corridor — a trend that accelerated sharply after 2020 and has fundamentally reshaped the county's demographic and housing profile.

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