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Cumberland County is Maine's most populous county — home to Portland, Falmouth, Scarborough, and a constellation of coastal towns — but don't mistake it for a simple New England story about quaint charm and lobster boats. What's happening here is a genuine demographic reshaping: a coastal county that has absorbed pandemic-era migration, remote worker demand, and arts-and-tech spillover from Boston, while managing to hold onto a homeownership rate that defies its rising prices.
The headline number is the 8.1% year-over-year price appreciation — well above national averages and striking for a market where the median sale price is already sitting at $550,000. That figure puts Cumberland in uncomfortable territory for local buyers. With a median household income of $92,983, the county's price-to-income ratio has stretched to roughly 5.9x, nearly 50% above the national benchmark of 4x. For a county that still thinks of itself as "not Boston," the market is beginning to rhyme with Greater Boston's affordability pressures.
The 70.4% homeownership rate is genuinely impressive for a county anchored by a mid-sized city — most comparable urban-adjacent counties nationally run closer to 60-65%. But that headline figure masks a painful rental reality. The median rent of $1,492 sounds modest until you see that 44.6% of renters are cost-burdened, meaning they spend more than 30% of income on housing. One in five renters — 20% — faces severe rent burden. Portland proper has been locked in a multi-year housing affordability debate, with ballot measures, inclusionary zoning fights, and a vacancy rate that has repeatedly dipped to crisis levels. The county-wide vacancy rate of 14.2% is misleading; it includes seasonal and secondary homes along the coast, not the tight rental core around Portland's peninsula.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $550,000 | 5.9x county median household income |
| YoY Price Change | +8.1% | nearly double typical national appreciation |
| Severe Rent Burden | 20.0% | 1 in 5 renters spending 40%+ of income on rent |
| Work From Home Rate | 19.4% | well above ~15% national average |
The 19.4% work-from-home rate isn't incidental — it's arguably the engine of the price surge. Cumberland County attracted a disproportionate share of remote workers fleeing Greater Boston and New York during 2020-2022, drawn by relatively lower prices (at the time), Portland's nationally recognized food scene, and genuine four-season livability. That influx collided with a structurally constrained housing supply — coastal geography, historic district restrictions, and slow permitting — producing the price spiral now visible in the data.
The county's educational profile reinforces the professional-class character of this migration: 52.2% of residents hold a bachelor's or graduate degree, and the limited English-speaking population of 13.1% reflects Portland's role as a refugee resettlement hub, one of the more striking demographic facts about what outsiders assume is a homogeneous Maine city.
What makes Cumberland County, Maine unique? Cumberland County is one of the few non-metropolitan coastal counties in the Northeast where homeownership remains above 70% even as prices approach Boston-suburb levels — the result of deep generational ownership stock colliding with a sudden wave of high-income remote-worker demand. Portland's emergence as a genuine culinary and cultural destination has accelerated that demand in ways few predicted a decade ago.
Is Portland, Maine's housing market still affordable compared to Boston? Increasingly, no — at least not for first-time buyers or renters. The median sale price of $550,000 and a price-to-income ratio approaching 6x puts Cumberland County well outside traditional affordability thresholds. Buyers priced out of Boston found refuge here through 2021, but that arbitrage window has largely closed. The remaining advantage is quality-of-life per dollar, not raw price.
Why is the vacancy rate so high if housing is so unaffordable? The 14.2% vacancy figure is skewed by coastal Maine's large stock of seasonal and second homes — camps on Sebago Lake, cottages in Cape Elizabeth and Harpswell — that sit empty through winter. The functional vacancy rate for year-round rentals in Portland itself is dramatically lower, which is precisely what sustains the rent burden crisis the data reveals.
Cumberland County is one of the largest real estate markets with over 191,132 properties in our database.
Properties in Cumberland County average $667,898, reflecting a competitive market.
The price per square foot of $352 reflects strong property valuations in this area.
Home prices in Cumberland County are 33% higher than the Maine average.
| Metric | Cumberland County | Maine Avg | vs State |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $667,898 | $503,156 | +33% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 1,898 | 1,568 | +21% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $352 | $321 | +10% |
| Properties | 191,132 | 967,392 | -80% |
Based on property sales data from the last 18 months
The average home price in Cumberland County, ME is $667,898, based on analysis of 191,132 properties in our database.
Our database includes 191,132 properties in Cumberland County, ME, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Cumberland County, ME is $352. This is calculated from an average home price of $667,898 and average size of 1,898 square feet.
Homes in Cumberland County, ME average 1,898 square feet, with an average price of $667,898.
Cumberland County, ME is one of 16 counties in Maine with property data available. Browse other counties to compare market conditions and pricing.
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