Garrett County, MD
Property Data

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

Total Properties

37,366

Average Home Price

$420,138

Average Square Feet

1,800

Price per Sq Ft

$212

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
23716,756

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

37,366

Median Home Price

$263,500

Average Home Price

$420,138

Average Square Feet

1,800

Price per Sq Ft

$212

Recent Sales (12mo)

640

YoY Price Change

24.5%

Sales Velocity

60.8%

Maryland's Mountain Escape: Garrett County's Paradox of Affordability and Inequality

Garrett County sits at Maryland's westernmost tip, wedged against West Virginia and Pennsylvania in the Allegheny Mountains — and it behaves nothing like the rest of the state. While Montgomery County neighbors wrestle with $700,000 starter homes and impossible price-to-income ratios, Garrett County offers a median home price of $235,000. But scratch beneath that number and you'll find one of the most economically bifurcated housing markets in the Mid-Atlantic.

The culprit — and the engine — is Deep Creek Lake.

Maryland's largest freshwater lake draws second-home buyers from Baltimore, Washington D.C., and Pittsburgh with enough capital to completely distort a county of fewer than 29,000 people. That tension between the vacation-home economy and the working rural community explains almost everything unusual in this dataset.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$235,000Below national median of $320,000
Avg Home Price$404,79372% above median — extreme luxury skew
Vacancy Rate32.3%Nearly 3x the national average of ~11%
YoY Price Change+11.4%Among Maryland's fastest appreciating markets

The Vacancy Number That Tells the Real Story

A 32.3% vacancy rate would signal economic collapse in most American counties. Here, it signals something else entirely: a county where nearly one in three housing units sits empty most of the year, waiting for its out-of-town owner to arrive for ski season or a summer weekend on the lake. The Wisp Resort ski area, Deep Creek Lake State Park, and a robust short-term rental economy have effectively transformed a significant share of Garrett's housing stock into hospitality infrastructure. That's great for Airbnb hosts. It's harder news for a young Garrett County family trying to find affordable long-term rental housing.

The Inequality Hiding Behind Low Prices

The Gini Index of 0.482 is striking for a rural county — that level of income inequality more commonly appears in major urban metros. The price spread tells the same story: the bottom 10% of homes sell for $42,500, while the top 10% clear nearly $1 million. These aren't just different neighborhoods; they represent two different economies sharing the same geography.

Labor force participation at 58.7% is notably low, which tracks with a median age of 48.1 and a 65-plus population that has swelled to nearly a quarter of all residents. Garrett County is aging, and aging fast — retirees who either grew up here or cashed out of expensive metro areas are increasingly defining the county's demographic character.

The 11.4% year-over-year price appreciation is remarkable for a rural county, likely accelerated by post-pandemic remote-work migration and continued second-home demand. With broadband access at 83.2% and 11.1% of workers already remote, Garrett is better positioned than most Appalachian communities to attract location-independent professionals — though the infrastructure gaps that remain still matter.

FAQs

What makes Garrett County unique in Maryland's real estate market? Garrett County is Maryland's only true mountain resort county, where Deep Creek Lake drives a second-home and vacation rental economy that coexists — sometimes uneasily — with a working-class rural community. This creates an unusually wide spread between affordable starter homes and luxury lakefront properties, a vacancy rate several times the national norm, and some of the state's fastest recent price appreciation despite modest median incomes.

Is Garrett County affordable for full-time residents? By the numbers, yes — a rent burden of 23.5% is actually below the national distress threshold of 30%, and median home prices remain attainable relative to the national benchmark. But the picture is more complicated: rising vacation-home demand is pushing prices up at 11.4% annually, SNAP benefit usage runs at 15.5% of households, and the child poverty rate of 13.5% suggests that the county's apparent affordability doesn't translate to economic security for many year-round families.

Is the Deep Creek Lake area a good real estate investment? The data suggests continued momentum: double-digit price appreciation, strong short-term rental demand, and post-pandemic migration trends all favor the market. The caveat is the wide price variance — buyers entering near the luxury tier are in a very different market than those purchasing entry-level properties, and a county this dependent on discretionary tourism spending carries inherent cyclical risk.

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