11963 Furlong Road

Property details·Freeport, Ionia County, Michigan·34-030-030-000-045-00

3Beds
1Baths
1,639Sq ft
1.00Acres
1900Built

Location

Address

11963 Furlong Road

Freeport, MI 49325

Ionia County

Parcel ID

34-030-030-000-045-00

Coordinates

42.785865, -85.307587

Building details

Bedrooms
3
Bathrooms
1
Square feet
1,639
Year built
1900
Fireplace
Yes

Land & lot

Lot size
1.00 acres
Land area
43,560 sq ft
Land use code
1001

Tax & assessment

CategoryAmount
Tax value$729.47
Market value$149,000
Assessed value$74,500
Building value$121,400
Land value$27,600

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

County context

Ionia County 2026 Insights

Ionia County, Michigan: Affordable by Almost Any Measure — With a Few Catches

There's a version of the American housing dream that most metro markets have made nearly impossible: own a single-family home, keep your commute manageable, and still have money left over at the end of the month. In Ionia County, Michigan, tucked between Grand Rapids and Lansing along the Grand River corridor, that version still exists. The numbers here read like a throwback to a more balanced era of American homeownership — and that's not an accident.

With a median home value of just $189,400 against a median household income of $73,436, Ionia County's affordability ratio sits at roughly 2.6x income — less than half the national benchmark of 4x. That's not a rounding error. That's a structural reality shaped by a rural-to-small-town economy, limited in-migration pressure, and a housing stock that's overwhelmingly modest, owner-occupied, and built for working families rather than investors.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Value$189,40059% of the national median ($320,000)
Homeownership Rate77.2%well above national avg of ~65%
Price-to-Income Ratio2.6xvs. 4x national benchmark
Rent Burden Rate42.2%exceeds 30% "cost-burdened" threshold

Owners Win. Renters Struggle.

The headline affordability story has a shadow side. While homeowners here are sitting pretty — 77.2% of households own their home, one of the higher rates you'll find in Michigan — renters face a genuinely difficult market. A median rent of $840 sounds cheap on paper, but when nearly 42% of renters are cost-burdened and almost one in five face severe rent burden, it tells you that the rental stock is serving a population whose incomes are significantly lower than the county median. This is a common pattern in rural Michigan counties: the ownership ladder is accessible if you're already on it, but the rungs at the bottom are slippery.

The Educational and Labor Force Picture

Ionia County's workforce profile reflects its industrial and agricultural roots. With 13% of adults holding a bachelor's degree — compared to roughly 33% nationally — and 38% stopping at a high school diploma, the county's labor market skews toward skilled trades, manufacturing, and corrections. The Bellamy Creek and Ionia Correctional Facilities are major local employers, a common driver of stability in rural Michigan economies but also a factor that complicates labor force participation and income distribution. The county's 59.1% labor force participation rate trails the national average, partly explained by a disability rate (13.8%) that trends high in post-industrial rural communities.

One data point that catches the eye: a 16.5% limited-English rate, unusually high for a county of this profile, likely reflecting agricultural labor communities in the region.

What Makes Ionia County Unique?

Q: What makes Ionia County unique in Michigan's housing market? It offers genuine affordability with high homeownership in a state where mid-sized cities like Grand Rapids are pricing out working families. Ionia County functions as a pressure-release valve — close enough to metro employment, with home prices that haven't followed metro trajectories.

Q: Is Ionia County a good place to rent? With caution. Rents are nominally low, but nearly half of renters are cost-burdened, suggesting the rental market serves a lower-income population that doesn't benefit from the county's overall affordability story. Ownership is where the value truly lies.

Q: Why is the limited-English population so high in Ionia County? Agricultural communities throughout mid-Michigan draw significant seasonal and permanent labor, particularly in fruit and vegetable production, which likely accounts for the elevated figure relative to the county's overall size.

Nearby properties

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