Property details·Lenoir, Watauga County, North Carolina·2847-21-9523-000
325 Rockhouse Ridge Road
Lenoir, NC 28645
Watauga County
2847-21-9523-000
36.119232, -81.565265
| Category | Amount | Year |
|---|---|---|
| Assessed value | $48,200 | 2026 |
Values reflect public tax roll data as of the year shown.
County context
Watauga County is one of the most visually spectacular places in the American South — home to Boone, Appalachian State University, and some of the highest elevations east of the Mississippi. It attracts second-home buyers from Charlotte and the Piedmont Triad, weekend skiers from Raleigh, retirees chasing cool summers, and a steady stream of students. The result is a real estate market that looks, on paper, almost nothing like the community actually living in it.
The gap between who owns here and who can afford to own here is the defining story of Watauga County's housing market right now.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $436,750 | 8.5x the county's median household income |
| YoY Price Change | +10.8% | nearly double the national rate of appreciation |
| Rent Burden Rate | 57.3% | nearly 2x the 30% threshold considered sustainable |
| Vacancy Rate | 35.9% | one of the highest in North Carolina |
That 35.9% vacancy rate is the number that should stop you cold. Nationally, a vacancy rate above 10% typically signals a buyer's or renter's market — slack in the system, downward pressure on prices. In Watauga, it signals the opposite. A huge portion of the county's roughly 33,000 housing units sit empty most of the year as vacation homes, Airbnb rentals, or seasonal mountain retreats. The units aren't available to locals. They're commodities held by outsiders, and they're actively shrinking the supply of year-round housing while inflating prices across the board.
This is increasingly common in high-amenity mountain counties — think Blowing Rock just to the south, or Jackson County farther west — but Watauga's combination of a major university and a high-profile ski resort at Sugar Mountain creates an unusually intense version of the dynamic.
A poverty rate of 24.7% alongside a graduate degree attainment rate of nearly 22% sounds contradictory until you remember that Appalachian State enrolls about 20,000 students. Students inflate poverty statistics (they're income-poor on paper), suppress the under-18 population share to just 12.4%, drag the median age down to 32.2, and push school enrollment to an extraordinary 39.4% of residents. They also help explain the 57.3% rent burden figure — renters spending nearly three-fifths of their income on housing — which is genuinely alarming even after you discount for student households.
The child poverty rate, however, tells a cleaner story: at 10.4%, it's meaningfully lower than the overall poverty rate, which means real economic hardship is real but not as catastrophic as the headline number suggests for year-round families.
The spread between the 10th percentile sale price ($65,000) and the 90th percentile ($1.2 million) is extraordinary — nearly a 20-to-1 ratio. This isn't a single market. It's a local workforce housing market and a resort luxury market layered on top of each other, sharing infrastructure but serving completely different buyers. The average sale price of $587,752 sits dramatically above the median of $436,750 precisely because high-end mountain estates pull the average skyward.
At 10.8% year-over-year appreciation, neither market is cooling down.
What makes Watauga County unique in the North Carolina real estate market?
Watauga is one of a small number of North Carolina counties where second-home and vacation demand so thoroughly dominates the housing stock that it has fundamentally decoupled prices from local incomes. The combination of Appalachian State University, the Blue Ridge Parkway, multiple ski resorts, and proximity to major Piedmont metros makes it a collision point between a working mountain community and an affluent leisure economy — and the housing market reflects that tension more sharply than almost anywhere else in the state.
Is Boone, NC a good place to buy a vacation home or investment property?
The appreciation trend — up nearly 11% in a single year — and the persistently high vacancy rate (indicating strong vacation rental activity) make Watauga County attractive to investors. However, municipalities in the area have been increasingly scrutinizing short-term rental regulations in response to housing affordability pressure, and buyers should research local zoning before assuming Airbnb income will remain unrestricted.
Why is the rent burden so high in Watauga County despite relatively modest rents?
The median rent of $1,066 is not extreme by urban standards, but it represents a crushing share of local wages. Many of the county's year-round residents work in hospitality, retail, and service jobs tied to the tourism and university economy — sectors where $30,000–$40,000 annual incomes are common. When housing costs consume more than half of income, it reflects an income problem as much as a rent problem.
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