0 Weaver Hill Drive
Apex, NC 27502
Wake County
0230604
35.703838, -78.959252
County context
There's a useful shorthand for understanding Wake County: Raleigh is its capital, but ambition is its currency. Home to over 1.15 million people and growing by roughly 60 new residents every single day, Wake County has spent the last decade transforming from a mid-sized Southern metro into one of the most consequential technology and life sciences corridors in the American Southeast. The data reflects a county in the middle of a prosperity surge — and grappling seriously with what that prosperity costs.
The most striking number in Wake County's profile isn't the home price — it's the education stack. More than 56% of adults hold a bachelor's degree or higher, with 22.5% possessing a graduate or professional degree. That's roughly double the national graduate degree rate, and it's not accidental. The Research Triangle Park, a sprawling innovation campus straddling Wake and Durham counties, draws engineers, biotech researchers, and software developers from across the globe. Add NC State University in the heart of Raleigh and a constellation of corporate relocations — Apple's new campus, major expansions from Advance Auto Parts, Bandwidth, and others — and you have a labor market that has essentially engineered its own talent density.
The result: a median household income of $101,763, some 35% above the national median, with a labor force participation rate of nearly 70% and unemployment sitting at a modest 4.2%.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $467,500 | Up 5.5% YoY; nearly 1.5x national median |
| Price-to-Income Ratio | 4.6x | Above 4x benchmark but relatively contained for a tech hub |
| Work From Home Rate | 26.0% | Among the highest of any major U.S. county |
| Severe Rent Burden | 21.0% | 1-in-5 renters spending 50%+ of income on housing |
Here's the tension Wake County can't quite resolve: for a county this wealthy, housing affordability is deteriorating with unsettling speed. The spread between the 10th percentile home price ($278,000) and the 90th percentile ($925,500) reveals a market bifurcating sharply. The median rent of $1,508 sounds reasonable until you learn that 45.6% of renters are cost-burdened — a figure well above the 30% threshold economists consider healthy — and that 21% face severe rent burden, spending more than half their income on housing. In a county where the poverty rate is a low 7.9%, that rent burden figure is a warning signal about who's being left behind as the professional class expands.
The county's 26% work-from-home rate — extraordinarily high even by post-pandemic standards — partly explains both the elevated home prices and why this market has remained insulated from the correction seen in other Sun Belt metros.
With a median year built of 2007, Wake County's housing stock is among the newest of any major metro county in the country. This reflects an aggressive suburban expansion stretching through Cary, Apex, Holly Springs, and Fuquay-Varina — municipalities that collectively added more homes in the last 15 years than many entire states. Nearly 10,000 homes sold in the past 12 months alone, suggesting liquidity remains strong even as prices climb.
What makes Wake County unique? Wake County sits at the convergence of government, research, and technology in a way few American counties can match. As the seat of state government and the anchor of Research Triangle Park, it attracts both policy professionals and STEM talent simultaneously — creating unusually broad and resilient economic demand for housing.
Is Wake County still affordable compared to other tech hubs? Yes — but the window may be closing. At a 4.6x price-to-income ratio, Wake remains significantly cheaper than San Francisco (10x+) or Seattle (7x+). But rent burden data suggests affordability pressure is hitting renters and lower-wage workers hard, even as homeowners build equity rapidly.
Why are home prices rising so fast in Wake County? A combination of continued corporate relocation, in-migration from higher-cost Northeast and West Coast metros, a high work-from-home rate sustaining suburban demand, and a housing supply that — despite impressive construction — simply hasn't kept pace with population growth approaching 3% annually.
Apex has 39,564 properties in our comprehensive database.
Properties in Apex average $631,994, reflecting a competitive market.
Buyers can expect to pay around $236 per square foot in this market.
Home prices in Apex are 11% higher than the Wake County average.
| Metric | Apex | Wake County | vs County |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $631,994 | $571,051 | +11% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 2,679 | 2,437 | +10% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $236 | $234 | +1% |
| Properties | 39,564 | 461,464 | -91% |
Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.
The average home price in Apex, NC is $631,994, based on analysis of 39,564 properties in our database.
Our database includes 39,564 properties in Apex, NC, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Apex, NC is $236. This is calculated from an average home price of $631,994 and average size of 2,679 square feet.
Homes in Apex, NC average 2,679 square feet, with an average price of $631,994.
Apex, NC is one of many cities in Wake County, NC with property data available. Browse other cities in the county to compare market conditions and pricing.
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