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There's a tension at the heart of Androscoggin County that its housing data captures almost perfectly. This is a working-class county anchored by Lewiston and Auburn — the twin cities straddling the Androscoggin River, once defined by their textile mills and shoe factories — that is quietly experiencing one of the more striking home price runs in northern New England. An 8.5% year-over-year appreciation rate in a county where median household income sits roughly 10% below the national average tells a complicated story about demand, displacement, and a community in genuine transition.
At first glance, a $321,000 median home price looks almost quaint compared to Portland's frothy market or the coastal Maine towns priced out of reach for most working families. But context matters: with median household income at $67,298, Androscoggin residents face a price-to-income ratio nudging 4.8x — above the national benchmark of 4x, and straining in a county where 36% of adults hold only a high school diploma and per capita income is just under $36,000.
The rental side is where the pressure becomes acute. A median rent of $966 sounds reasonable on paper, but a 43.8% rent burden — meaning the typical renter is spending well above the standard 30% threshold on housing costs — signals genuine distress. One in five renters faces severe rent burden. With SNAP participation at 16% and a child poverty rate of 19.2%, these aren't abstract percentages.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| YoY Price Change | +8.5% | Outpacing most of rural Maine |
| Rent Burden | 43.8% | Well above 30% healthy threshold |
| Bachelor's Degree Rate | 15.8% | Roughly half the national average of ~34% |
| Child Poverty Rate | 19.2% | Nearly 1 in 5 children |
Lewiston in particular has undergone a quiet transformation since the early 2000s, when it became one of the most significant resettlement communities for African and East African immigrants in the entire Northeast — a demographic shift that revitalized commercial corridors and added density to a city that had been hollowing out for decades. That energy, combined with remote workers priced out of Portland (90 minutes south), has introduced new demand into a county with relatively old housing stock — the median year built is 1965 — and limited new construction pipeline.
The limited English rate of 15.1% is notably high for rural Maine and reflects that ongoing resettlement reality, one that has made Androscoggin County a fascinating case study in how immigration can stabilize a post-industrial community.
What makes Androscoggin County unique? It's one of the rare post-industrial counties in New England where home prices are rising sharply and working-class households still dominate — a combination that makes affordability the defining local issue. Its immigrant population, unusual in size for rural Maine, has meaningfully shaped both its cultural identity and its economic trajectory.
Is it still affordable to buy a home in Androscoggin County compared to the rest of Maine? Relative to coastal Maine and Portland's metro area, yes — but the gap is closing fast. The entry-level tier (10th percentile prices around $164,000) still offers genuine affordability for first-time buyers, but the 8.5% annual appreciation pace means that window may be narrowing.
Why is rent burden so high if rents seem low? Because wages are lower still. Androscoggin's economic base in healthcare, light manufacturing, and service industries doesn't generate the incomes needed to absorb even moderate rents — making it a textbook case of affordability being a function of the income side of the equation, not just sticker prices.
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