43 Rose Haven Drive
Marshall, NC 28753
Madison County
9714763840
35.747285, -82.649539
County context
Tucked into the far western tip of North Carolina, Madison County sits in the shadow of the Black Mountains and along the French Broad River — a landscape so dramatically beautiful that it has long attracted artists, back-to-the-landers, and more recently, remote workers fleeing Asheville's surging prices just 30 miles to the south. That geographic reality explains a lot about what the numbers are telling us here.
The headline is impossible to ignore: year-over-year home prices are up 15.4%, a figure that would be striking anywhere but feels seismic in a rural Appalachian county of just 21,600 people. At a median home price of $351,000 against a median household income of $58,628, the affordability math is tightening fast — a price-to-income ratio pushing 6x, well above the national benchmark of 4x. Madison County is no longer a place where locals can easily afford to buy.
This is what Asheville's transformation looks like one county over. As Buncombe County's median home values pushed past $400,000 in recent years, buyers — and increasingly, short-term rental investors — began looking to neighboring Madison County for relative value. The $944,200 price at the 90th percentile tells you exactly who's arriving: buyers with equity to deploy, searching for mountain acreage or river-view cabins with Airbnb upside. That top-decile price point sits in striking contrast to the $70,000 floor, underscoring a county with enormous internal inequality — a Gini index of 0.476 is notably high for a rural community, reflecting the widening gap between longtime residents and new-money arrivals.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| YoY Price Change | +15.4% | Nearly 3x the national average appreciation rate |
| Vacancy Rate | 25.0% | Reflects high second-home and STR inventory |
| Homeownership Rate | 77.9% | Well above national average; deeply rooted community |
| Price-to-Income Ratio | 5.99x | vs. 4x national benchmark — affordability eroding fast |
The 25% vacancy rate is perhaps the most structurally revealing number in the dataset. In most markets, that would signal distress. Here, it signals conversion — properties held as seasonal retreats or short-term rentals rather than primary homes. Meanwhile, the 18.6% severe rent burden rate suggests that renters — who already occupy just 22% of households — are feeling the squeeze acutely, with a median rent of $764 that sounds modest but bites hard against local wages.
The older-than-average population (median age 44.5, with nearly a quarter over 65), a disability rate of 18.6%, and labor force participation of just 55.1% paint a picture of a community with deep roots, limited economic options, and real vulnerability to displacement. The county's traditional industries — agriculture, small manufacturing, tourism — don't generate incomes that scale with the new market reality.
What makes Madison County, NC unique? Madison County is one of the last genuinely rural counties in western North Carolina that hasn't been fully absorbed into Asheville's orbit — yet. Its combination of mountain terrain, intact small-town character (Marshall, the county seat, is a favorite of heritage travelers), and proximity to a booming metro makes it both special and increasingly pressured.
Is Madison County a good place to buy a vacation home or short-term rental? The data suggests investors have already discovered it — the 25% vacancy rate and 90th-percentile prices above $944,000 indicate significant second-home activity. Rising prices and a limited permanent population mean strong appreciation potential, but local sentiment toward STR-driven displacement is worth weighing in a community this size.
Will home prices in Madison County keep rising? At 15.4% annual appreciation, the county is in a sprint it likely cannot sustain indefinitely. But as long as Asheville remains expensive and remote work enables flexible living, demand pressure from equity-rich out-of-market buyers is unlikely to disappear — which means affordability for local residents will remain a pressing concern.
Our database includes 9,055 properties in Marshall.
Properties in Marshall average $532,558, reflecting a competitive market.
The price per square foot of $301 reflects strong property valuations in this area.
Home prices in Marshall are 16% higher than the Madison County average.
| Metric | Marshall | Madison County | vs County |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $532,558 | $460,460 | +16% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 1,768 | 1,836 | -4% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $301 | $251 | +20% |
| Properties | 9,055 | 26,760 | -66% |
Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.
The average home price in Marshall, NC is $532,558, based on analysis of 9,055 properties in our database.
Our database includes 9,055 properties in Marshall, NC, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Marshall, NC is $301. This is calculated from an average home price of $532,558 and average size of 1,768 square feet.
Homes in Marshall, NC average 1,768 square feet, with an average price of $532,558.
Marshall, NC is one of many cities in Madison County, NC with property data available. Browse other cities in the county to compare market conditions and pricing.
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