115 Kinsale Drive

Property details·Durham, Durham County, North Carolina·210384

4Beds
3Baths
2,988Sq ft
0.24Acres
2008Built
$436KLast sale

Location

Address

115 Kinsale Drive

Durham, NC 27517

Durham County

Parcel ID

210384

Coordinates

35.927359, -78.999690

Building details

Bedrooms
4
Bathrooms
3
Square feet
2,988
Year built
2008

Land & lot

Lot size
0.24 acres
Land area
10,454 sq ft
Subdivision
Blenheim Woods
Neighborhood
R709a
Zoning
PDR 2.690
Land use code
1001

Tax & assessment

CategoryAmount
Tax value$8,652.26
Market value$872,820
Assessed value$872,820
Building value$717,820
Land value$155,000

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

County context

Durham County 2026 Insights

Durham County, North Carolina: The Bull City's Housing Market Reflects Its Dual Identity

Durham has never fit neatly into a single story. It's a post-industrial tobacco town that reinvented itself as a biotech and research hub, home to Duke University's $13 billion endowment and one of the most celebrated food scenes in the American South — and its housing data tells exactly that complicated, fascinating story.

A Tale of Two Price Points

The gap between Durham's median home value ($351,700) and its median sale price ($420,000) deserves attention. That $68,000 spread suggests the active market skews sharply toward newer, higher-end transactions, while older, more modest stock drags the assessed value baseline down. More telling still is the distance between the 10th and 90th price percentiles — from $205,000 to $832,500 — a nearly 4x spread within a single county. This isn't a monolithic market; it's two housing economies coexisting uneasily along the same light-rail corridor.

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$420,0005.3x median household income
Rent Burden Rate44.5%far above 30% healthy threshold
Graduate Degree Holders25.9%among highest-educated counties in the South
YoY Price Change-2.4%first meaningful cooling after pandemic-era surge

The Education Premium — and Its Discontents

With 53.5% of residents holding at least a bachelor's degree, Durham County ranks among the most credentialed counties in the Southeast — a direct consequence of Duke, North Carolina Central University, and the Research Triangle's gravitational pull on knowledge-economy workers. That human capital profile has historically driven home prices upward faster than incomes. At a 5.3x price-to-income ratio, Durham sits well above the national benchmark of roughly 4x, even as the county's median household income ($79,501) modestly outpaces the national figure.

But the Gini Index of 0.464 — meaningfully above the national average of around 0.39 — exposes the other side of this story. A 12% poverty rate and a child poverty rate of 16.6% coexist with a highly compensated professional class. The result is extreme rent pressure: 44.5% of renters are cost-burdened, and 21% face severe rent burden, paying more than half their income on housing. For a city that built its progressive reputation on equity and community investment, these numbers represent a genuine policy challenge.

Remote Work and the Sticky Demand Problem

Durham's 20.2% work-from-home rate is well above national norms and helps explain why price softening has been relatively modest despite rising rates. Knowledge workers with location flexibility haven't fled Durham — the amenities, the universities, the food culture on Foster Street, the proximity to Raleigh — all of it keeps demand stickier than in more purely speculative markets. The slight year-over-year price dip of -2.4% looks more like a correction exhale than a structural retreat.


FAQs

What makes Durham County unique in North Carolina's real estate market? Durham sits at the intersection of deep institutional wealth (Duke University, major biotech employers) and a legacy working-class population, creating one of the widest price ranges and highest income inequality figures of any major county in the state. Few places in the South combine this level of educational attainment with this level of rent burden — it's a market shaped by two very different economic realities sharing the same zip codes.

Is Durham still affordable compared to other Research Triangle cities? Relative to the broader Triangle, Durham historically offered a discount versus Cary or North Raleigh. That gap has narrowed significantly. With a median sale price of $420,000 and rising rents averaging $1,415/month, Durham's affordability advantage is now largely a story of its lower-priced entry-level stock — the $205,000 homes that still exist in older East Durham neighborhoods — rather than any broad market discount.

Is now a good time to buy in Durham County? The -2.4% year-over-year price change marks the first meaningful cooling since the pandemic boom, which could signal a more favorable entry window than buyers faced in 2021-2022. However, with rent burden already extreme and inventory constraints persistent, dramatic price declines seem unlikely in a county where research-sector employment remains robust and institutional anchors like Duke continue to draw high-income transplants.

Local market context

Durham is one of the largest real estate markets with over 133,696 properties in our database.

Properties in Durham average $592,521, reflecting a competitive market.

The price per square foot of $289 reflects strong property valuations in this area.

Durham prices closely align with the Durham County average.

MetricDurhamDurham Countyvs County
Average Price$592,521$591,958Same
Avg Sq Ft2,0512,066-1%
Price/Sq Ft$289$287+1%
Properties133,696145,500-8%

Nearby properties

Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.

Frequently Asked Questions About Durham, NC Real Estate

What is the average home price in Durham, NC?

The average home price in Durham, NC is $592,521, based on analysis of 133,696 properties in our database.

How many properties are tracked in Durham, NC?

Our database includes 133,696 properties in Durham, NC, providing comprehensive market coverage.

What is the price per square foot in Durham, NC?

The average price per square foot in Durham, NC is $289. This is calculated from an average home price of $592,521 and average size of 2,051 square feet.

What is the average home size in Durham, NC?

Homes in Durham, NC average 2,051 square feet, with an average price of $592,521.

How does Durham, NC compare to other cities in Durham County?

Durham, NC is one of many cities in Durham County, NC with property data available. Browse other cities in the county to compare market conditions and pricing.

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