Property details·Harmony, Davie County, North Carolina·G100000024
1342 County Line Road
Harmony, NC 28634
Davie County
G100000024
35.945666, -80.689532
| Category | Amount | Year |
|---|---|---|
| Tax value | $559.97 | 2026 |
| Market value | $81,320 | 2025 |
| Assessed value | $81,320 | 2026 |
| Building value | $63,760 | — |
| Land value | $17,560 | — |
Values reflect public tax roll data as of the year shown.
County context
Tucked into the Piedmont Triad region just west of Winston-Salem, Davie County doesn't generate headlines the way Mecklenburg or Wake counties do — and that's precisely the point. With a median home price of $296,000 sitting at less than half the cost of comparable suburban markets in Charlotte's orbit, this is a county where middle-class homeownership remains genuinely achievable. In a state that has become synonymous with real estate sticker shock, that distinction deserves serious attention.
The numbers tell a story of deep-rooted residential stability. An 83.4% homeownership rate is extraordinary by any measure — nearly 20 percentage points above the national norm — and it reflects a community where people come to stay. The county seat of Mocksville has long attracted families seeking a quieter alternative to the Triad's urban core without sacrificing highway access to Greensboro, Winston-Salem, or even Charlotte via I-40. These aren't weekend buyers; these are people putting down roots.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $296,000 | roughly 4x median income — near the national benchmark |
| Homeownership Rate | 83.4% | nearly 30 pts above the national average of ~65% |
| Median Rent | $889/mo | well below NC's urban median; tight supply limits options |
| YoY Price Change | +0.7% | market cooling after pandemic surge |
At a median age of 45 — five years older than the national median — Davie County skews noticeably mature. More than 21% of residents are 65 or older, a share that will only climb as retirees from the Triad continue to seek quieter, lower-density living. This dynamic partly explains the county's very low labor force participation rate of 58.9%, which sits well below national norms, but in context reflects a substantial retirement-age population rather than economic distress.
Car dependency here is near-absolute: 80.4% of workers drive alone, and public transit usage rounds to essentially zero (0.1%). This isn't a criticism — it's the reality of a rural-suburban county with 165 people per square mile and limited municipal infrastructure. The flip side is that 91.7% broadband penetration and 7.3% work-from-home adoption suggest the county is threading the needle between its rural character and the demands of a modern economy.
The headline price-to-income ratio looks healthy on paper, but dig deeper and you find fault lines. A child poverty rate of 15.2% — higher than the overall poverty rate of 10% — signals that economic stress concentrates among younger families. Severe rent burden affects 17.8% of renters, a meaningful share given that median rent of $889 leaves little cushion. With only 16.6% of households renting, the rental stock is limited and relatively unaffordable for those who can't access the ownership market.
The wide spread between the 10th percentile home price ($125,000) and the 90th ($595,900) also reflects a bifurcated market: modest rural parcels alongside newer construction catering to Triad commuters willing to trade urban amenities for space.
What makes Davie County unique? Davie County's homeownership rate of 83.4% is one of the highest in North Carolina and ranks it among the most owner-occupied counties in the entire Southeast. Combined with a price-to-income ratio near the healthy national benchmark of 4x, it represents a rare pocket of genuine middle-class housing affordability within commuting distance of major Piedmont Triad employers.
Is Davie County a good place to retire in North Carolina? For many, yes. The combination of below-average home prices, a mature existing population (median age 45, 21.8% over 65), low crime profile, and access to Winston-Salem's medical infrastructure makes Davie County increasingly attractive to retirees. The tradeoff is near-total car dependency and limited walkable amenities.
Why is the Davie County housing market barely growing? After the frenzied appreciation of 2021–2023, Davie County's year-over-year price change has slowed to just 0.7% — a near-plateau. Higher interest rates have cooled demand from commuter buyers, and the county's limited new construction pipeline means the market is in a holding pattern rather than a correction. For long-term buyers, this may represent an unusually calm entry window.
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