1424 Don Bare Road

Property details·Jefferson, Wilkes County, North Carolina·2003129

2Beds
2Baths
2,800Sq ft
5.75Acres
1996Built

Location

Address

1424 Don Bare Road

Jefferson, NC 28640

Wilkes County

Parcel ID

2003129

Coordinates

36.365732, -81.337104

Building details

Bedrooms
2
Bathrooms
2
Square feet
2,800
Year built
1996

Land & lot

Lot size
5.75 acres
Land area
250,470 sq ft
Neighborhood
306
Land use code
1001

Tax & assessment

CategoryAmount
Tax value$1,879.82
Market value$474,000
Assessed value$474,000
Building value$395,560
Land value$78,440

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

County context

Wilkes County 2026 Insights

Wilkes County, North Carolina: Appalachian Affordability with Hidden Pressures

Tucked into the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains in northwestern North Carolina, Wilkes County is the kind of place that rarely makes real estate headlines — and that's precisely what makes it worth understanding. Home to Wilkesboro and the storied Yadkin Valley wine country, the county carries a proud Appalachian identity shaped by furniture manufacturing, moonshining history (it's not a stretch to call it the birthplace of NASCAR culture), and a fiercely independent rural character. The housing market here reflects all of that: deeply affordable on the surface, but quietly stressed beneath it.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$211,00034% below national median home value
Price-to-Income Ratio4.2xnear national benchmark of 4x — deceptively healthy
Homeownership Rate73.9%well above national average of ~65%
Rent Burden Rate35.1%exceeds the 30% stress threshold

Affordable to Buy, Harder to Rent

At a glance, Wilkes County looks like an affordability success story. A median home price of $211,000 against a national median north of $320,000 makes this one of the more accessible markets in the Carolinas, and a price-to-income ratio near the nationally recommended 4x benchmark suggests reasonable balance. But that picture only holds for the nearly three-quarters of households who own their homes — a high ownership rate that reflects both deep community roots and multi-generational property transfers rather than active market churn.

For the county's renters, the math is considerably grimmer. A median rent of $715 per month may sound modest in absolute terms, but against a median household income of just over $50,000, it pushes the average renter household above the 30% rent burden threshold. Nearly 14.4% of renters face severe rent burden — spending over half their income on housing. In a county where the poverty rate is 16.4% and child poverty reaches a sobering 24.5%, those numbers represent real household instability.

An Aging, Anchored Community

The median age of 45.3 — well above the national median of roughly 38 — tells a story familiar across rural Appalachia: younger residents leaving for Boone, Charlotte, or beyond, while longer-tenured residents age in place. Over 22% of the population is 65 or older, which helps explain the 18.2% disability rate and a labor force participation rate of just 55.6%. The economy leans on healthcare, light manufacturing, and agriculture, with limited white-collar employment partly reflected in a college attainment rate of just 11.6% — far below North Carolina's statewide figure of around 34%.

The 15% housing vacancy rate is worth watching. In some rural markets, high vacancy signals distress; here, it more likely reflects a combination of seasonal mountain-area properties, inherited homes in various states of use, and modest in-migration that hasn't yet pressured supply.

A Market Moving Slowly, Deliberately

Year-over-year price appreciation of 2.4% is modest compared to the post-pandemic run-ups seen elsewhere in the Carolinas, but it represents genuine, steady movement. The gap between the median price ($211,000) and average price ($283,272) reveals a meaningful luxury tail — properties in the upper Yadkin Valley wine corridor and along mountain ridge lines skew averages upward, with the 90th percentile reaching nearly $490,000.


FAQs

What makes Wilkes County unique in North Carolina's real estate market? Wilkes County combines some of the most accessible home prices in the state with a cultural identity rooted in Appalachian independence — high homeownership, low density, and a market that largely resisted the volatility that swept coastal and metro North Carolina during 2020–2023. It's one of the few places in the state where a first-time buyer earning a modest income can still purchase a single-family home near the national affordability benchmark.

Is Wilkes County a good place to invest in rental property? The fundamentals are mixed. Rents are low in absolute terms ($715 median), vacancy is elevated at 15%, and the renter pool faces significant income constraints — nearly 1 in 7 renters is severely rent-burdened already. Investors seeking cash flow will find thin margins, though the low entry prices create opportunity for long-term appreciation plays, particularly as remote work and Blue Ridge tourism continue drawing attention to the region.

How does the local economy affect housing demand? With a labor force participation rate under 56% and limited large employer anchors, housing demand in Wilkes County is driven more by family and community ties than by job-market migration. The county's largest employers tend to be in healthcare and light manufacturing — sectors that provide stability but not the income growth that fuels rapid appreciation. That dynamic keeps the market grounded, which is both its challenge and its appeal.

Nearby properties

Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.

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