3316 Coventry Forest Lane

Property details·King, Forsyth County, North Carolina·5991-46-5631.00

3Beds
1Baths
1,008Sq ft
0.54Acres
1992Built

Location

Address

3316 Coventry Forest Lane

King, NC 27021

Forsyth County

Parcel ID

5991-46-5631.00

Coordinates

36.260689, -80.375205

Building details

Bedrooms
3
Bathrooms
1
Square feet
1,008
Year built
1992

Land & lot

Lot size
0.54 acres
Land area
23,522 sq ft
Subdivision
Coventry Forest (90002-7700)
Zoning
RS20
Land use code
1001

Tax & assessment

CategoryAmount
Tax value$1,989.29
Market value$197,900
Assessed value$197,900
Building value$157,900
Land value$40,000

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

County context

Forsyth County 2026 Insights

Winston-Salem's Housing Market: Affordable Core, Hidden Pressures

Forsyth County — home to Winston-Salem — occupies a peculiar sweet spot in the New South economic landscape. It's affordable enough to attract working families priced out of Charlotte and Raleigh, yet struggling enough that nearly one in four children lives in poverty. That tension runs through every data point in this market, and it's impossible to understand Forsyth County real estate without understanding what Winston-Salem actually is: a post-industrial city that reinvented itself around healthcare, higher education, and craft manufacturing, but hasn't yet translated that reinvention into broad prosperity.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$285,000well below national median of $320,000
Rent Burden Rate43.6%far above the 30% distress threshold
Gini Index0.473high inequality for a mid-size Southern county
YoY Price Change+0.7%near-flat — a dramatic cooldown from recent boom years

The Affordability Paradox

At first glance, Forsyth County looks like a buyer's dream. A median home price of $285,000 against a national median of $320,000, with price-per-square-foot at just $178, makes this county one of the more accessible mid-size metro markets in the Southeast. The price-to-income ratio hovers around 4.3x — uncomfortable, but a far cry from the 9x ratios choking markets like Asheville or coastal California.

But look at the renters, and the picture darkens sharply. With a median rent of $1,046 and a rent burden rate of 43.6%, nearly half of Forsyth's renter households are spending beyond what financial guidelines consider sustainable. Over 22% face severe rent burden — meaning more than half their income goes to housing. In a county where the median household earns $65,541 (roughly 13% below the national average), that squeeze is very real. This is partly a legacy of Winston-Salem's tobacco and textile industrial base: wages never fully recovered from those sectors' collapse, and the replacement jobs in healthcare at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center and education at Wake Forest University haven't trickled down uniformly.

A Market Catching Its Breath

The 0.7% year-over-year price change signals a market that overheated during the pandemic migration wave and is now exhaling. The spread between the median ($285,000) and average ($452,311) sale price is striking — a $167,000 gap that reflects a cohort of higher-end properties pulling the average skyward while the bulk of transactions cluster in working-class and middle-income price bands. The P10-to-P90 range of $100,000 to $644,000 confirms just how stratified this market really is.

A 10.1% vacancy rate is worth watching. It's elevated enough to suggest some slack in the market, which may be keeping a lid on price appreciation even as demand from Triangle and Charlotte transplants continues.

Who Lives Here — and Who's Struggling

A child poverty rate of 22.3% in a county with a 14.7% overall poverty rate reveals that economic hardship is disproportionately concentrated among families. The 13.9% limited-English-speaking population — high for a county this size — reflects significant Latino migration tied to construction and food processing industries in the region, a pattern common across Piedmont North Carolina.

The 62.7% homeownership rate slightly exceeds the national norm, which is somewhat surprising given the income gap, but consistent with the county's relatively modest home prices making ownership attainable for a broader slice of residents than in pricier metros.


FAQs

What makes Forsyth County unique in North Carolina's housing market? Forsyth County offers some of the most accessible home prices among North Carolina's larger counties, yet it combines that affordability with significant income inequality and renter stress — a combination that reflects Winston-Salem's ongoing transition away from its industrial past. It's neither a boom market like Wake County nor a depressed rural market; it occupies a complicated middle ground that makes it genuinely interesting for buyers, investors, and policy watchers alike.

Is Winston-Salem a good place to buy a home right now? For buyers, the near-flat appreciation (0.7% YoY) and ample inventory (10.1% vacancy rate) suggest negotiating leverage that didn't exist two years ago. The low price-per-square-foot and a median price well below national norms make entry points accessible — particularly for buyers relocating from higher-cost metros. The risk is the wider income environment: with poverty elevated and rent burdens high, the buyer pool for resale may remain constrained.

Why is rent so burdensome in an "affordable" county? Affordability is relative to purchase prices, not necessarily to local wages. When median household income sits at $65,541 and rents have risen alongside broader Sunbelt trends, renters in the lower half of the income distribution face serious strain — even if Forsyth County looks cheap compared to Raleigh or Durham. The county's income inequality (a Gini index of 0.473 is high by peer-county standards) means the headline median masks very different realities across the income spectrum.

Nearby properties

Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.

Want more property data?

Access owner information, tax records, transfer history, and more through our API.

View API pricing

Access Forsyth County, NC Property Data Through Our Enterprise API

Get instant access to comprehensive county assessors-based property data with your free API key

Need Bulk Data?

Email us at hello@realie.ai