187 Ridge View Drive

Property details·Pisgah Forest, Transylvania County, North Carolina·9505-45-9396-000

3Beds
2Baths
2,008Sq ft
2015Built
$636KLast sale

Location

Address

187 Ridge View Drive

Pisgah Forest, NC 28768

Transylvania County

Parcel ID

9505-45-9396-000

Coordinates

35.220422, -82.667212

Building details

Bedrooms
3
Bathrooms
2
Square feet
2,008
Year built
2015
Fireplace
2 fireplaces

Land & lot

Neighborhood
48101
Land use code
1001

Tax & assessment

CategoryAmount
Tax value$3,294.4
Market value$685,620
Assessed value$685,620
Building value$546,080
Land value$139,540

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

County context

Transylvania County 2026 Insights

Transylvania County, North Carolina: Where the Mountains Price Out the People Who Live Here

There's a reason Transylvania County calls itself "The Land of Waterfalls." Tucked into the Blue Ridge Mountains in the far western corner of North Carolina, this 379-square-mile county contains more than 250 named waterfalls, including Looking Glass Falls and the crown jewel, Whitefall Falls. It's one of the most visually stunning places in the American South — and that beauty is now driving a housing market that is quietly becoming unaffordable for the people who actually call it home.

A Market Running Away From Its Residents

The gap between what homes list for and what residents earn tells the essential story here. With a median home price of $400,000 against a median household income of $64,523 — itself well below the national median of $75,149 — Transylvania County's price-to-income ratio sits at roughly 6.2x. That's nearly double the 4x national benchmark that economists consider the outer edge of affordability. Meanwhile, year-over-year prices jumped 10.7%, a pace that would be striking in a metro boomtown and is remarkable in a rural county of just 33,000 people.

What's driving it? Brevard, the county seat, has long attracted retirees and second-home buyers drawn by the climate, the Pisgah National Forest, and relative proximity to Asheville — itself one of the most in-demand small cities in the Southeast. The pandemic accelerated this dynamic dramatically, as remote workers and early retirees poured into the mountains. The average sale price of $510,550 is already 52% above the median — a sign that high-end transactions are pulling the market upward and that a two-tier housing economy has taken hold.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$400,0006.2x median household income
YoY Price Change+10.7%nearly double national appreciation norms
Vacancy Rate23.8%well above typical rural county norms
Severe Rent Burden25.6%1 in 4 renters paying 50%+ of income on housing

The Vacancy Paradox

One of the most revealing numbers in Transylvania County's data is its 23.8% vacancy rate. With nearly a quarter of housing units sitting empty at any given moment, the county doesn't have a housing shortage in the traditional sense — it has a utilization problem. Thousands of those units are almost certainly second homes and seasonal retreats, occupied for a few weeks in summer and at peak leaf season, then dark the rest of the year. This is a pattern seen across mountain resort economies from Asheville's exurbs to the Colorado Rockies: permanent residents compete for a shrinking slice of the housing stock while vacation properties absorb the remainder.

An Aging County Under Financial Pressure

Transylvania's median age of 51.9 years — compared to roughly 39 nationally — reflects decades of retirement in-migration and youth out-migration. Nearly 31% of residents are 65 or older, while fewer than 16% are under 18. That demographic skew has real economic consequences. Labor force participation sits at just 52%, which partly reflects this retired population rather than structural unemployment, but it also means the local workforce is thin. A child poverty rate of 21.5% — substantially higher than the county's overall poverty rate of 14.2% — suggests that working families with children are bearing disproportionate economic strain even as retirees with fixed assets fare better.

The rental market tells a similarly difficult story. With a median rent of $909 and a severe rent burden rate of 25.6%, roughly one in four Transylvania renters is paying more than half their income on housing — a crisis-level threshold by any measure.


FAQs

What makes Transylvania County, NC unique? Transylvania County is one of the most waterfall-dense places in North America, anchored by the Pisgah National Forest and the arts-oriented small city of Brevard. This natural character has made it a magnet for retirees and second-home buyers, creating an unusual dynamic where a rural county of 33,000 people has developed a luxury-oriented housing market while a significant portion of its permanent population struggles with rent burden and child poverty.

Is Transylvania County, NC affordable to live in? Increasingly, no — at least for buyers and renters on typical local incomes. At a median home price of $400,000 against a median household income of just over $64,000, the county's price-to-income ratio is more than 50% above what housing economists consider sustainable. Renters face their own pressure, with one in four paying more than half their income on housing costs.

Why are home prices rising so fast in Transylvania County? A combination of factors: the Asheville metro's overflow effect, strong demand from out-of-state retirees and remote workers drawn by the Blue Ridge scenery and relatively mild summers, and a housing stock where a large share of units function as vacation properties rather than primary residences. With 10.7% year-over-year appreciation, the county is caught in a feedback loop where scenic desirability attracts wealth that prices out the local workforce.

Local market context

Our database includes 5,682 properties in Pisgah Forest.

With an average price of $411,741, Pisgah Forest offers mid-range housing options.

Buyers can expect to pay around $198 per square foot in this market.

Home prices in Pisgah Forest are 15% lower than the Transylvania County average.

MetricPisgah ForestTransylvania Countyvs County
Average Price$411,741$484,432-15%
Avg Sq Ft2,0792,071Same
Price/Sq Ft$198$234-15%
Properties5,68236,650-84%

Nearby properties

Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.

Frequently Asked Questions About Pisgah Forest, NC Real Estate

What is the average home price in Pisgah Forest, NC?

The average home price in Pisgah Forest, NC is $411,741, based on analysis of 5,682 properties in our database.

How many properties are tracked in Pisgah Forest, NC?

Our database includes 5,682 properties in Pisgah Forest, NC, providing comprehensive market coverage.

What is the price per square foot in Pisgah Forest, NC?

The average price per square foot in Pisgah Forest, NC is $198. This is calculated from an average home price of $411,741 and average size of 2,079 square feet.

What is the average home size in Pisgah Forest, NC?

Homes in Pisgah Forest, NC average 2,079 square feet, with an average price of $411,741.

How does Pisgah Forest, NC compare to other cities in Transylvania County?

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

Want more property data?

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

View API pricing

Access Transylvania 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