Henderson County, NC
Property Data

Explore accurate parcel and ownership records,
directly sourced from county assessors.

Total Properties

80,458

Average Home Price

$466,400

Average Square Feet

2,065

Price per Sq Ft

$235

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
4222,875

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

80,458

Median Home Price

$400,000

Average Home Price

$466,400

Average Square Feet

2,065

Price per Sq Ft

$235

Recent Sales (12mo)

1,644

YoY Price Change

1.7%

Sales Velocity

154.5%

Henderson County, NC: Retirement Haven Meets Affordability Squeeze

There's a reason Henderson County keeps showing up on "best places to retire" lists. Nestled in the Blue Ridge Mountains just south of Asheville, Hendersonville — the county seat — offers a small-city charm that draws retirees from Florida, the Northeast, and the Midwest in steady waves. The result is a demographic profile that looks unlike most of North Carolina: a median age of 47.2 years and 26% of residents over 65, compared to the state's roughly 39-year median age. One in four Henderson County residents is a senior citizen. That's not a statistic — that's a community identity.

The Retirement Premium Problem

The influx of equity-rich retirees has done something predictable to the housing market: it has driven prices well beyond what working-age locals can comfortably afford. The median home price sits at $400,000 — yet median household income is $67,623, yielding a price-to-income ratio of roughly 5.9x, nearly 50% above the national benchmark of 4x. The gap between census-reported home values ($317,800) and actual transaction prices ($400,000 median, $461,727 average) signals that the market has moved faster than the data can keep up with — a familiar story in the western Carolina mountains post-pandemic.

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$400,0005.9x local median income vs. 4x national benchmark
Homeownership Rate74.2%well above national avg of ~65%
Rent Burden Rate43.2%far exceeds 30% healthy threshold
YoY Price Change-0.7%first cooling after sustained pandemic-era surge

Renters Caught in the Middle

While homeowners — many of whom arrived with out-of-state equity — are sitting comfortably, renters are under genuine stress. A rent burden rate of 43.2% means the average renter household spends well over the recommended 30% of income on housing. Nearly 19% face severe rent burden, a figure that likely reflects service-industry workers, younger residents, and families who can't compete with cash buyers for available inventory. The child poverty rate of 19.3% — nearly one in five children — underscores that behind the mountain scenery and apple festival tourism, economic precarity is a real part of the county's story.

A Slight Cooling, But Don't Call It a Correction

The -0.7% year-over-year price change is the first meaningful deceleration after the pandemic frenzy that reshaped Asheville's entire metro orbit. A vacancy rate of 12.1% suggests some slack is returning to the market — but much of that vacancy likely reflects seasonal and second-home inventory rather than affordable units entering circulation. With only 1,122 sales in the last 12 months and a wide price range from $168,000 at the 10th percentile to $775,000 at the 90th, this is a bifurcated market: attainable entry points exist, but the middle is thin.


FAQs

What makes Henderson County, NC unique? Henderson County is one of Western North Carolina's premier retirement destinations, combining Blue Ridge Mountain scenery, a mild four-season climate, and proximity to Asheville's arts and dining scene. Its unusually old median age (47.2) and high homeownership rate reflect decades of in-migration from retirees cashing out of higher-cost metros — a pattern that has reshaped its housing market more than almost any other economic force.

Is Henderson County affordable for working families? It's complicated. Entry-level homes exist below $200,000, but the median transaction price of $400,000 far outpaces local wages. Renters face particular strain, with average rent burdens exceeding 43% of income — making the county increasingly difficult for younger or lower-income households despite its rural character and relatively modest density.

How has Henderson County's housing market changed since 2020? Like much of western NC, Henderson County experienced sharp price appreciation during the pandemic as remote workers and retirees competed for limited inventory. The recent -0.7% year-over-year dip suggests that surge has plateaued, but prices remain elevated relative to local incomes, and the structural imbalance between retiree demand and workforce housing supply hasn't been resolved.

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