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There's a real estate story unfolding in Pender County that most people outside the Cape Fear region don't fully appreciate. Wedged between Wilmington's booming New Hanover County to the south and the quieter reaches of the coastal plain to the north, Pender County has become the pressure-release valve for one of the Southeast's hottest housing markets — and the data shows both the opportunity and the strain that comes with that role.
The headline figure that demands explanation: a median home price of $398,000 against a median household income of just under $77,000. That's a price-to-income ratio nudging 5.2x — well above the national benchmark of 4x — in a county most people would describe as rural. This isn't a city. With just 73 people per square mile and a stock of homes with a median build year of 2002, Pender County reads more like exurbia than a coastal hotspot. Yet prices here have been pulled north by the gravitational force of Wilmington real estate, where comparable inventory has become genuinely unaffordable for working families.
One number stands out as genuinely puzzling at first glance: a 22.1% vacancy rate. In a tight market with prices near $400K, why is more than one in five housing units sitting empty? The answer lies along the coast. Communities like Topsail Beach, Surf City, and Hampstead carry significant second-home and seasonal inventory — vacation properties and investment cottages that register as "vacant" in census counts but are very much part of the local economic fabric. This dynamic helps explain the extraordinary spread between the 10th percentile home price ($120,000, likely inland manufactured housing) and the 90th percentile ($854,800, almost certainly a waterfront or near-beach property). Few counties of this size show that kind of range.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $398,000 | 5.2x median household income vs. 4x national benchmark |
| Homeownership Rate | 81.8% | significantly above national rate of ~65% |
| Vacancy Rate | 22.1% | driven by coastal second-home and seasonal inventory |
| Severe Rent Burden | 25.9% | 1 in 4 renters paying >50% of income on housing |
Pender County's 81.8% homeownership rate — among the highest you'll find anywhere in North Carolina — tells you something important about who the county actually serves. This is overwhelmingly owner-occupier territory: military veterans (9.7% of residents, reflecting proximity to Camp Lejeune and Fort Liberty), retirees (18% are 65+), and working families who drove 30 minutes inland to find a mortgage they could afford. The 6% unemployment rate and 60% labor force participation suggest a significant retiree base pulling those numbers, not economic distress.
The county's renters, however, are caught in a genuine affordability squeeze. A median rent of $1,072 sounds reasonable until you see that 45.6% of renters are cost-burdened — nearly half. With a severe burden rate of 25.9%, Pender's rental market is quietly one of the tougher spots for low-income residents on the North Carolina coast.
What makes Pender County unique in North Carolina's housing market? Pender County occupies a rare middle ground: it has the homeownership culture and affordability of a rural county but the price trajectory of a coastal resort market. Its position directly adjacent to Wilmington — one of the fastest-growing metros in the Southeast — means it absorbs housing demand that New Hanover County can no longer accommodate, driving prices well above what local incomes alone would typically support.
Is Pender County a good place to buy a beach property? Topsail Island, which falls within Pender County, offers comparatively lower entry points than the Outer Banks or Brunswick County's Brunswick Islands, but the gap is narrowing fast. The P90 price of $854,800 reflects premium coastal inventory, and with only 774 sales recorded in the past 12 months against more than 31,000 total housing units, turnover is relatively low — inventory, when it appears, tends to move.
Why are rents so high relative to incomes in Pender County? The county's rental stock is squeezed from two sides: vacation-rental demand along the coast reduces the supply of long-term rentals, while Wilmington's spillover workforce increasingly competes for inland units. The result is a market where rents have risen faster than local service-sector wages, producing burden rates more associated with urban cores than coastal rural counties.
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