Property details·East Grand Rapids, Kent County, Michigan·41-14-27-483-013
325 Maplewood Road
East Grand Rapids, MI 49506
Kent County
41-14-27-483-013
42.956573, -85.592257
County context
Kent County doesn't make national housing headlines the way Austin or Miami do, but that's precisely what makes it interesting. Home to Grand Rapids — Michigan's second-largest city and one of the Midwest's most quietly dynamic metros — the county is threading a needle that most fast-growing regions fail to manage: rising property values, strong homeownership, and household incomes comfortably above the national median, all without the catastrophic affordability collapse that has plagued coastal markets.
The median home price of $325,000 sits almost exactly at the national median home value benchmark, yet the market is appreciating at 5.6% year-over-year. That's meaningful, sustained growth — not a correction, not a bubble, but a market that's earned its trajectory through genuine economic fundamentals.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $325,000 | Near national median despite strong growth |
| Homeownership Rate | 70.4% | Well above national avg of ~64% |
| YoY Price Change | +5.6% | Sustained, not speculative |
| Rent Burden Rate | 46.6% | Renters squeezed despite moderate rents |
Grand Rapids has spent the last decade reinventing itself — from furniture manufacturing hub to a diversified economy anchored by healthcare (Spectrum Health, Corewell), craft brewing (it's legitimately one of America's best beer cities), advanced manufacturing, and a growing professional services sector. That diversification shows up in the income data: a median household income of $80,390 beats the national figure by roughly $5,000, and a 4.2% unemployment rate suggests the labor market is doing real work.
The price-to-income ratio comes in around 4x — essentially on par with the national benchmark — which is increasingly rare among metros with this level of economic momentum. Compare that to peer metros like Columbus or Indianapolis, and Kent County holds its own while offering a genuine Great Lakes lifestyle premium.
The most striking tension in Kent County's data is the gap between owners and renters. With a 70.4% homeownership rate — six full percentage points above the national average — the county is a genuine ownership society. But renters are getting squeezed hard. A 46.6% rent burden rate means nearly half of all renters are spending beyond the traditional 30%-of-income threshold, and 22.4% face severe rent burden. With a median rent of $1,176, the dollar amounts aren't outlandish by coastal standards, but for lower-income households in a market with a 13.6% child poverty rate, the math isn't working.
The 15.9% limited English population — notably high for a Midwest county — reflects a significant immigrant workforce, often concentrated in manufacturing and food processing jobs that don't provide the income floor needed to absorb rental cost increases.
A median year built of 1965 signals a county that grew up in the postwar era and hasn't fully refreshed its supply. With a vacancy rate of just 4.6% and over 5,700 sales in the past 12 months, absorption is healthy but tight. The $610,000 90th-percentile price point suggests a luxury ceiling that hasn't gone stratospheric — there's still room for move-up buyers without the market bifurcating into haves and have-nots at the top end.
What makes Kent County, Michigan unique in the Midwest housing market? Kent County combines above-average homeownership rates, incomes that beat the national median, and a price-to-income ratio that remains near the 4x national benchmark — a combination that has largely disappeared in high-growth metros elsewhere. The Grand Rapids economy, anchored by healthcare, craft industry, and manufacturing, provides a diversified income base that keeps demand real rather than speculative.
Is Grand Rapids/Kent County affordable for renters? Increasingly, no. Despite moderate nominal rents around $1,176 per month, nearly half of renters in Kent County exceed the standard 30%-of-income affordability threshold. The ownership market remains relatively accessible, but the rental market reflects a supply shortage that hits lower-income households — particularly families — hardest.
Is the Kent County housing market still growing? Yes. At 5.6% year-over-year appreciation and over 5,700 transactions in the past year, the market is active and trending upward. The low vacancy rate and steady in-migration driven by economic opportunity suggest that growth has structural support rather than being driven by speculation alone.
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