1620 108th Street Southwest

Property details·Byron Center, Allegan County, Michigan·05-003-009-01

4Beds
2Baths
1,542Sq ft
1.81Acres
1972Built

Location

Address

1620 108th Street Southwest

Byron Center, MI 49315

Allegan County

Parcel ID

05-003-009-01

Coordinates

42.767909, -85.704534

Building details

Bedrooms
4
Bathrooms
2
Square feet
1,542
Year built
1972
Fireplace
Yes
Garage
2-car G

Land & lot

Lot size
1.81 acres
Land area
78,844 sq ft
Land use code
1001

Tax & assessment

CategoryAmount
Tax value$3,480.13
Market value$438,400
Assessed value$219,200
Building value$309,600
Land value$128,800

Values reflect public tax roll data as of the year shown.

County context

Allegan County 2026 Insights

Allegan County, Michigan: Lake Country Stability in a Volatile Market

There's a particular kind of real estate story that doesn't make national headlines — no dramatic crashes, no frenzied bidding wars spilling onto cable news — but tells you something important about the durability of mid-American communities. Allegan County is that story.

Tucked between Kalamazoo and the Lake Michigan shoreline, Allegan County occupies a peculiar sweet spot: close enough to West Michigan's industrial and logistics corridor to capture steady employment, yet rural enough that homeownership remains genuinely accessible to working families. With a median home price of $285,000 — well below the national median of $320,000 — and a household income that edges above the national average, the county's affordability math actually works in residents' favor. That's increasingly rare in 2024.

An Ownership Culture That Stands Apart

The number that jumps off the page is the homeownership rate: 86.1%. That's not just high — it's extraordinary. The national rate hovers around 65%, and even Michigan's statewide figure sits meaningfully lower. Only 13.9% of occupied housing units are renter-occupied, a figure that reflects the county's single-family-dominated housing stock (nearly 79% of units) and a deeply rooted culture of property ownership across its small towns, farm communities, and lakefront villages. Places like Saugatuck, Douglas, and Fennville aren't transient communities; people tend to stay.

That stability, however, is showing signs of pressure. Year-over-year prices are climbing at 7.4% — nearly double the pace most economists consider sustainable — and the gap between the P10 price floor ($87,930) and the P90 ceiling ($560,000) suggests a bifurcating market where entry-level buyers compete fiercely while premium lakefront properties set the upper bound.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Homeownership Rate86.1%vs ~65% national average — exceptionally high
YoY Price Change+7.4%well above sustainable ~3-4% benchmark
Median Home Price$285,000below national median of $320,000
Rent Burden38.5%above the 30% stress threshold

The Renter Squeeze Hidden Inside an Owners' County

The county's renters — a small minority, but a vulnerable one — are under real strain. A rent burden of 38.5% means the average renter is already beyond the 30% threshold that housing economists flag as financially stressful, and 15% face severe rent burden. With median rent at $1,065 and a vacancy rate of 13.9% (inflated significantly by seasonal lake homes sitting empty much of the year), the rental supply that actually serves year-round working residents is tighter than top-line numbers suggest. Child poverty at 13.9% — notably higher than the county's overall poverty rate of 9.3% — hints at concentrated hardship among younger, likely renting households.

The 17.4% limited English rate also stands out for a largely rural Michigan county, pointing to the significant agricultural workforce that has long supported fruit and vegetable farming in this part of the state — and a population that may face additional barriers to both homeownership and social services.


FAQs

What makes Allegan County unique in Michigan's real estate market? Allegan County combines below-national-median home prices with an ownership rate that approaches 90% — a combination that has virtually disappeared from coastal markets and is becoming rare even in the Midwest. Its blend of agricultural land, Lake Michigan access, and proximity to Grand Rapids and Kalamazoo employment hubs creates durable demand without the speculative overheating seen in resort-heavy markets.

Is Allegan County a good place to buy a home right now? For buyers who can get in, the affordability ratio remains reasonable — a median home at roughly 3.5x median household income compares favorably to the national 4x benchmark. But the 7.4% annual appreciation pace means that window may be narrowing, particularly for first-time buyers competing in the sub-$200,000 tier where inventory is tightest.

Why is the vacancy rate so high if the market is appreciating? Much of the 13.9% vacancy reflects seasonal and recreational properties along the Lake Michigan shoreline — cottages and second homes that sit empty outside summer. This inflates the vacancy figure without representing genuinely available housing, a distinction that matters enormously for anyone trying to read Allegan County's supply picture accurately.

Nearby properties

Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.

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