Kennebec County, ME
Property Data

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

Total Properties

58,883

Average Home Price

$323,315

Average Square Feet

1,818

Price per Sq Ft

$218

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

Loading map...
Total Properties
114,327

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

58,883

Median Home Price

$298,000

Average Home Price

$323,315

Average Square Feet

1,818

Price per Sq Ft

$218

Recent Sales (12mo)

695

YoY Price Change

2.0%

Sales Velocity

143.0%

Augusta's Backyard: How Maine's Capital County Tells a Story of Affordability, Aging, and Quiet Resilience

Kennebec County doesn't make national headlines. It doesn't have a tech corridor or a luxury condo boom. What it has is Augusta — Maine's modestly-scaled state capital — anchoring a county of working-class homeowners, aging demographics, and a housing market that, by the standards of coastal New England, still feels almost rational. Almost.

The median home price here sits at $300,000, roughly 6% below the national median home value, which is remarkable given that Maine's coastal markets — Portland, the Midcoast, Bar Harbor's orbit — have experienced some of the most aggressive appreciation in the eastern United States since 2020. Kennebec County absorbed some of that pressure but not all of it. The 6.1% year-over-year price gain signals that inland Maine is catching up, slowly and steadily, as remote workers priced out of Cumberland County look eastward up the turnpike.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$300,000~6% below national median
Homeownership Rate72.8%well above national avg of ~65%
Rent Burden Rate41.6%far exceeds 30% threshold
YoY Price Change+6.1%accelerating inland migration pressure

The Ownership Paradox

A 72.8% homeownership rate is genuinely striking — nearly 8 points above the national average. This is a county where people put down roots, quite literally. The median home was built in 1970, and the price spread is wide: the bottom 10% of sales come in under $128,000 while the top 10% reach $526,000 — a range that reflects everything from rural camp properties along the Kennebec River to renovated Victorian-era homes near the State House.

But here's the tension: renters are getting squeezed hard. Despite median rents of just $952 — well below national urban norms — nearly 19% of renters face severe rent burden, spending more than half their income on housing. When incomes are modest (the median household earns about $13,000 less than the national figure), even "affordable" rents bite deep. This is the quiet affordability crisis that doesn't show up in real estate headlines but lives in the data.

An Aging, Grounded Population

At a median age of 44 — five years above the national median — Kennebec County skews older, with more than 1 in 5 residents over 65. The 16.4% disability rate and labor force participation of just 60.8% reflect a population that has aged in place. This isn't decline so much as a community built around stability. The county's 9.8% veteran population adds to that character — Augusta hosts the Togus VA Medical Center, the oldest veterans' facility in the nation, a fact that shapes both the local economy and the community's identity.

The 13.8% work-from-home rate — respectable for a non-metro county — hints at the demographic reshuffling underway as remote-capable professionals discover that $300,000 buys a genuine house here, not a studio apartment.


FAQs

What makes Kennebec County unique? It's one of the few New England counties where homeownership remains broadly accessible at over 70%, anchored by a state capital economy of government jobs, healthcare (MaineGeneral Medical Center is a major employer), and a growing remote-work cohort. The Kennebec River corridor, the Togus VA campus, and Augusta's policy infrastructure give the county an economic floor that purely rural Maine counties lack.

Is Kennebec County a good place to buy a home right now? With a price-to-income ratio of roughly 4.6x — close to the national benchmark and dramatically lower than coastal Maine — the buy case is stronger here than in most of New England. The 14.6% vacancy rate (reflecting seasonal camps and second homes) means inventory exists, though the 6.1% annual appreciation suggests that window won't stay open indefinitely.

Why is rent burden so high if rents are relatively low? Because rent burden is about the relationship between rent and income, not rent alone. With a meaningful share of residents relying on public assistance, SNAP benefits (13.3%), or fixed incomes — and a large older population — even $952/month can represent a crushing share of monthly earnings. It's a reminder that "affordable housing markets" and "affordable housing" are not the same thing.

More Counties in Maine

Access Kennebec County, ME Property Data Through Our Enterprise API

Get instant access to comprehensive county assessors-based property data with your free API key

Need Bulk Data?

Email us at hello@realie.ai