Property details·Stevensville, Berrien County, Michigan·11-12-0010-0004-05-2
0 West Glenlord Road
Stevensville, MI 49127
Berrien County
11-12-0010-0004-05-2
42.044196, -86.498047
County context
Berrien County occupies one of Michigan's most geographically privileged corners — the southwestern tip of the Lower Peninsula, where Lake Michigan's eastern shoreline gives way to wine country, fruit orchards, and the cultural gravitational pull of Chicago just 90 miles to the west. Communities like St. Joseph, Benton Harbor, and New Buffalo have long attracted weekend escapes and second-home buyers from the Chicago metro, and that pressure is now showing up unmistakably in the data.
The headline number: home prices jumped 11.6% year-over-year, a pace that would be striking anywhere but feels particularly loaded in a county where median household income sits roughly 16% below the national average. This isn't a boom-town story driven by job creation — it's a demand story driven by geography, lifestyle appeal, and remote work migration that has reshaped lakefront and near-lakefront markets across the Midwest.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $230,000 | Rising fast; up 11.6% YoY |
| Price-to-Income Ratio | 3.6x | Deceptively affordable on paper |
| Rent Burden Rate | 45.2% | Far above the 30% healthy threshold |
| Vacancy Rate | 17.5% | Among the highest for a growing market |
On paper, a median home price of $230,000 against a national median of $320,000 looks like a buyer's paradise. But the price-to-income math is only half the story. The county's 22.2% child poverty rate — substantially higher than its overall poverty rate of 15.2% — signals deep, concentrated economic stress that coexists awkwardly with the Instagram-ready vineyards of Baroda and the boutique hotels of New Buffalo.
The rental market tells the starker truth. Nearly one in four renters faces severe rent burden, spending more than half their income on housing. This in a county where median rent is just $923 — a figure that, nationally, would seem modest. When rents at that level still crush a quarter of tenants, it reflects an income floor problem, not a rent ceiling problem.
Berrien County's 17.5% vacancy rate is the data point that ties everything together. For a county with a relatively healthy homeownership rate of 72.8% and a low vehicle-scarcity rate, that many empty units suggests a significant second-home and seasonal inventory — properties that inflate the vacancy statistics while doing nothing to house local workers or families. The $66,556 to $489,900 spread between the bottom and top deciles of home prices tells the same story: two very different housing markets sharing one county boundary.
Labor force participation at just 60.4%, combined with a 6.5% unemployment rate and 20.8% of residents aged 65 or older, points to a county transitioning demographically. Retirees and remote workers are arriving; young working families face headwinds.
What makes Berrien County unique in Michigan's housing market? It's the only Michigan county simultaneously functioning as a Rust Belt community, an agricultural region, and a Chicago-area vacation destination. That triple identity creates unusual price pressure: lifestyle buyers from a top-five U.S. metro compete for housing in a local economy that runs on manufacturing, tourism, and agriculture — driving appreciation that local wages struggle to support.
Why are so many Berrien County renters cost-burdened if rents seem low? The county's median rent of $923 looks modest by national standards, but it's colliding with a local income base significantly below the national median. A disproportionate share of renters work in hospitality, seasonal agriculture, and service industries — sectors that dominate the county's economy — where wages haven't kept pace with housing costs driven partly by outside demand.
Is Berrien County a good place to buy a home right now? For buyers relocating from Chicago or other high-cost metros, purchasing power remains favorable — the price-per-square-foot of $166 is a fraction of what lakefront-adjacent communities cost elsewhere in the Great Lakes region. For first-time local buyers, the 11.6% annual price increase is compressing the window of affordability quickly, particularly as the entry-level inventory tightens.
Our database includes 5,601 properties in Stevensville.
With an average price of $339,092, Stevensville offers mid-range housing options.
Buyers can expect to pay around $155 per square foot in this market.
Home prices in Stevensville are 29% higher than the Berrien County average.
| Metric | Stevensville | Berrien County | vs County |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $339,092 | $262,685 | +29% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 2,183 | 1,876 | +16% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $155 | $140 | +11% |
| Properties | 5,601 | 100,396 | -94% |
Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.
The average home price in Stevensville, MI is $339,092, based on analysis of 5,601 properties in our database.
Our database includes 5,601 properties in Stevensville, MI, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Stevensville, MI is $155. This is calculated from an average home price of $339,092 and average size of 2,183 square feet.
Homes in Stevensville, MI average 2,183 square feet, with an average price of $339,092.
Stevensville, MI is one of many cities in Berrien County, MI with property data available. Browse other cities in the county to compare market conditions and pricing.
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