Property details·Macon, Noxubee County, Mississippi·142 -34-019.00
1025 Tom Bennett Road
Macon, MS 39341
Noxubee County
142 -34-019.00
33.200527, -88.349393
| Category | Amount | Year |
|---|---|---|
| Tax value | $82.25 | 2026 |
| Market value | $3,820 | 2025 |
| Assessed value | $3,820 | 2026 |
| Building value | $1,700 | — |
| Land value | $2,120 | — |
Values reflect public tax roll data as of the year shown.
County context
At first glance, Noxubee County looks like a housing affordability dream. Median home values sit at $85,200 — less than 27 cents on the national dollar — and renters pay just $590 a month. But the numbers reveal a more sobering truth: in a county where one in four residents lives below the poverty line, even those rock-bottom prices are breaking people.
Nearly 31% of renters here face severe rent burden — meaning they spend more than half their income on housing. That's not an affordability success story; it's a poverty trap dressed up in low price tags. When household incomes average around $38,800, a $590 rent check still consumes a punishing share of a monthly paycheck.
Noxubee County sits in the heart of Mississippi's Black Belt — a swath of the Deep South historically defined by its dark, fertile soil and now defined, economically, by persistent underdevelopment. The county seat of Macon is the commercial and civic anchor of a landscape that is otherwise strikingly sparse: just 15 people per square mile.
The economic indicators here form a cluster that's rare even by Mississippi standards. A labor force participation rate of just 50.8% means roughly half of working-age adults are neither employed nor actively job-seeking — a figure that reflects a combination of disability (25.3% of the population), caregiving burdens, and a simple scarcity of local opportunity. The county's 7.2% unemployment rate, while elevated, arguably undercounts the true employment crisis by excluding those who've stopped looking.
The child poverty rate of 38.4% is the statistic that should stop readers cold. More than one in three children here is growing up in poverty — a generational feedback loop that explains why only 5.7% of adults hold a bachelor's degree, one of the lowest rates in the state.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Value | $85,200 | 73% below the national median of $320,000 |
| Severe Rent Burden | 30.9% | Nearly 1 in 3 renters spend 50%+ of income on housing |
| Child Poverty Rate | 38.4% | More than double the national average |
| Vacancy Rate | 19.9% | Nearly 1 in 5 homes sits empty |
Almost one in five housing units in Noxubee County is vacant. That figure — 19.9% — reflects decades of outmigration as younger residents have followed jobs to Jackson, Memphis, and beyond. The county's population has been declining for generations, leaving behind an aging housing stock and a median age of nearly 40. More than 17% of residents are 65 or older.
The high homeownership rate of 75.8% is, paradoxically, part of this story. Many of those owners are elderly, long-rooted residents sitting on homes that are paid off but deteriorating — asset-rich in deed, cash-poor in reality.
What makes Noxubee County unique? Noxubee is one of Mississippi's most rural and economically isolated counties, combining some of the lowest home prices in the nation with some of the highest rates of rent burden and child poverty — a paradox that illustrates how cheap housing doesn't automatically mean affordable housing when incomes are thin enough.
Is Noxubee County a good place to buy a cheap property? Entry prices are among the lowest anywhere in the country, which attracts some investors and remote workers seeking affordable land. However, a 19.9% vacancy rate, limited broadband infrastructure (27.3% of households have no internet), and a shrinking population suggest limited appreciation upside and a thin rental market.
Why is the uninsured rate so high in Noxubee County? At 20%, Noxubee's uninsured rate reflects Mississippi's status as one of the last states to decline Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act, leaving a significant coverage gap for low-income working adults who earn too much for traditional Medicaid but too little to afford private plans.
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