5204 Logos Drive

Property details·Stokesdale, Guilford County, North Carolina·0231932

4Beds
2.5Baths
2,612Sq ft
0.46Acres
2025Built
$457KLast sale

Location

Address

5204 Logos Drive

Stokesdale, NC 27357

Guilford County

Parcel ID

0231932

Coordinates

36.224520, -79.973690

Building details

Bedrooms
4
Bathrooms
2.5
Square feet
2,612
Year built
2025
Fireplace
Yes
Garage
2-car A

Land & lot

Lot size
0.46 acres
Land area
20,038 sq ft
Neighborhood
7910b05
Zoning
PD-R
Land use code
1000

Tax & assessment

CategoryAmount
Tax value$556.08
Market value$65,000
Assessed value$65,000
Land value$65,000

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

County context

Guilford County 2026 Insights

Guilford County, North Carolina: The Triad's Beating Heart, Under Pressure

Guilford County — home to Greensboro and High Point — sits at the center of North Carolina's Piedmont Triad, a region that once powered America's textile and furniture industries and has spent the last three decades reinventing itself. That transformation shows up clearly in the housing data: a market that looks affordable on the surface, but conceals a growing affordability crisis for the third of residents who rent.

The median home price of $280,000 is well below the national median of $320,000, and at first glance this looks like a buyer's paradise. But context matters. With a median household income of $66,027 — about 12% below the national average — the affordability advantage largely evaporates for working families. A 20% down payment on a median-priced home here requires saving nearly $56,000, a tall order in a county where nearly 15% of residents live in poverty and almost 21% of children do.

The Renter's Dilemma

The sharpest story in Guilford County's data isn't home prices — it's rent burden. Nearly half of all renters (47.1%) spend more than 30% of their income on housing, the threshold economists consider unaffordable. More alarming: 21.3% face severe rent burden, meaning they're spending over half their paycheck on shelter. With median rent at $1,108 and incomes stretched thin, this is a genuine housing stress signal in a county where 40% of households rent.

High Point's role as the "Furniture Capital of the World" historically drew manufacturing workers at modest wages, and Greensboro's mix of universities — NC A&T, UNC Greensboro, Guilford College — creates a large population of students and early-career workers especially vulnerable to rent pressure. That context helps explain why the SNAP participation rate (14.9%) and public assistance figures mirror the poverty rate so closely.

A Market Frozen in Place

Perhaps the most striking single data point: year-over-year price change of 0.0%. After years of Sunbelt appreciation that swept through Charlotte, Raleigh, and the Research Triangle, Guilford County's market has essentially flatlined. This isn't necessarily alarming — it suggests the speculative froth that inflated other NC metros hasn't taken the same hold here — but it also signals that Guilford isn't yet attracting the kind of employer relocations or remote-worker migration that turbocharged peer markets 90 miles to the east.

The wide spread between the 10th percentile price ($100,000) and the 90th ($664,850) tells the story of a deeply segmented market: distressed and workforce housing on one end, suburban estates and golf course communities on the other.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$280,00012.5% below national median
Rent Burden Rate47.1%vs. 30% affordability threshold
Child Poverty Rate20.8%significantly above national avg (~18%)
YoY Price Change0.0%flat while NC statewide market grows

What makes Guilford County unique? Guilford County is North Carolina's third-largest county by population and contains two distinct major cities — Greensboro and High Point — each with separate economic identities. Greensboro anchors finance, logistics, and higher education, while High Point is globally synonymous with the furniture trade through its twice-yearly High Point Market, the largest furnishings industry trade show in the world. This dual-city structure creates unusual economic diversity within a single county, but also an income distribution — reflected in a Gini index of 0.479, above the national average — that suggests wealth is unevenly shared.

Is Guilford County affordable for first-time buyers? On paper, yes — home prices are below national norms. In practice, it depends heavily on income. For households near or below the median, the rent burden data suggests many residents are already financially stretched before considering a down payment. The county's 8.5% vacancy rate offers some inventory cushion, but first-time buyers in the under-$150,000 range will find slim pickings in a market where the 10th percentile of sales starts at $100,000.

Is the Greensboro/High Point area growing? Growth here is measured rather than explosive. The flat price appreciation reflects a market absorbing new residents — particularly from higher-cost Northeast metros — but not yet experiencing the runaway demand that has transformed the Triangle. Guilford County remains one of the more affordable entry points into a major North Carolina metro, which may prove to be its biggest asset as affordability pressures in Raleigh and Charlotte push buyers westward along I-40.

Local market context

Our database includes 2,830 properties in Stokesdale.

With an average price of $449,303, Stokesdale offers mid-range housing options.

Buyers can expect to pay around $195 per square foot in this market.

Stokesdale prices closely align with the Guilford County average.

MetricStokesdaleGuilford Countyvs County
Average Price$449,303$445,544+1%
Avg Sq Ft2,3062,147+7%
Price/Sq Ft$195$208-6%
Properties2,830241,981-99%

Nearby properties

Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.

Frequently Asked Questions About Stokesdale, NC Real Estate

What is the average home price in Stokesdale, NC?

The average home price in Stokesdale, NC is $449,303, based on analysis of 2,830 properties in our database.

How many properties are tracked in Stokesdale, NC?

Our database includes 2,830 properties in Stokesdale, NC, providing comprehensive market coverage.

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

The average price per square foot in Stokesdale, NC is $195. This is calculated from an average home price of $449,303 and average size of 2,306 square feet.

What is the average home size in Stokesdale, NC?

Homes in Stokesdale, NC average 2,306 square feet, with an average price of $449,303.

How does Stokesdale, NC compare to other cities in Guilford County?

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

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