Explore accurate parcel and ownership records,
directly sourced from county assessors.
There's a reason Washtenaw County feels different from most of Michigan — and from most of America. Home to the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, one of the country's flagship public research universities, this county has built an economy around knowledge work, healthcare, and tech spinoffs that insulates it from the industrial cycles that have battered much of the Midwest. The result is a place that looks, economically, far more like a coastal metro than a Rust Belt county — with all the affordability tensions that come with it.
The county's Gini index of 0.487 is striking. For context, values above 0.45 are typically associated with cities like Los Angeles or Miami — places with deep structural inequality. Here, that number reflects the collision between a highly credentialed professional class (31% hold graduate degrees, a figure that would rank among the highest of any county in the country) and a student and service-worker population that rents, earns little, and struggles with costs.
The rent burden statistic tells that story most plainly: 51.1% of renters are spending more than 30% of their income on housing — well above the threshold that economists define as burdensome. Nearly 29% face severe rent burden. In a county where the median household income beats the national figure by 16%, that number demands explanation. The answer is a housing market that has appreciated faster than wages for lower earners, compounded by a student population that inflates rental demand year-round.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $405,000 | 26% above national median |
| Rent Burden Rate | 51.1% | vs. 30% threshold — severe for a high-income county |
| Graduate Degree Holders | 31.0% | Among the highest rates of any U.S. county |
| YoY Price Change | +6.4% | Outpacing Michigan statewide appreciation |
Home prices here span an extraordinary range — from $180,000 at the 10th percentile to $770,000 at the 90th — reflecting genuinely different communities within the county. Ann Arbor proper commands premiums that would feel at home in Denver or Austin, while Ypsilanti and Saline offer relative entry points. The median year built of 1978 suggests a housing stock that's aging, and with only 2,667 sales in the past twelve months against nearly 158,000 total units, turnover is low. Owners are staying put, which limits supply and sustains upward price pressure.
The 20.3% work-from-home rate — elevated even by post-pandemic standards — reflects the professional composition of the workforce and has likely contributed to sustained local demand even as office markets softened elsewhere.
What makes Washtenaw County unique? It's one of the most educated counties in the United States, anchored by the University of Michigan, and maintains a high-income professional economy that has kept its housing market appreciating even as much of the Midwest stagnated. That credentialed wealth, however, creates stark inequality with renters and lower-income residents.
Is Ann Arbor still affordable compared to other college towns? Increasingly, no. With a median home price of $405,000 and rent burden rates comparable to coastal metros, Washtenaw County has graduated out of "affordable Midwest" status. It now benchmarks more closely against Boulder or Madison than against Lansing or Flint.
Why is the poverty rate relatively high given the strong incomes? The 13.8% poverty rate — above the national average despite strong median incomes — reflects the dual nature of a university county: tens of thousands of graduate students and undergraduate residents are counted in poverty metrics even when they are temporarily income-poor by circumstance rather than condition. Child poverty at 12.4% is a more structurally concerning signal for non-student families.
Get instant access to comprehensive county assessors-based property data with your free API key
Need Bulk Data?
Email us at hello@realie.ai