Bowman County, ND
Property Data

Explore accurate parcel and ownership records,
directly sourced from county assessors.

Total Properties

7,653

Average Home Price

Average Square Feet

Price per Sq Ft

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

Loading map...
Total Properties
8914,132

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

7,653

Median Home Price

Average Home Price

Average Square Feet

Price per Sq Ft

Recent Sales (12mo)

YoY Price Change

Sales Velocity

Where the Prairie Meets Prosperity: Bowman County's Quietly Remarkable Numbers

At the southwestern tip of North Dakota, where the badlands give way to open ranch country and the nearest interstate feels like a rumor, Bowman County defies nearly every assumption you'd make about a place with fewer than 3,000 residents and a population density of just 3 people per square mile. This is cattle and oil country — Theodore Roosevelt's "badlands" stretch into this corner of the state — and the economy here runs on extraction, agriculture, and the stubborn self-sufficiency of families who have worked this land for generations.

What makes the data immediately striking is the combination of genuine affordability and genuine prosperity. The median household income of $83,773 clears the national benchmark by more than 11%, yet the median home value sits at just $176,400 — barely half the national figure. The resulting price-to-income ratio of roughly 2.1x is extraordinary. In an era when coastal metros routinely see ratios above 10x, Bowman County homeownership doesn't require a generational wealth transfer or a bidding war. It requires showing up and staying.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Value$176,40055% below national median of $320,000
Homeownership Rate83.0%among the highest in the nation; national avg ~65%
Vacancy Rate24.4%reflects seasonal and agricultural housing dynamics
Rent Burden18.6%well below the 30% stress threshold

The Ownership Society, In Practice

An 83% homeownership rate isn't just a statistic — it's a cultural fingerprint. In rural agricultural counties across the Northern Plains, land and the house on it are often the same asset, passed down rather than sold. The rental market here is thin by design: only 17% of occupied units are renter-occupied, and even those renters aren't being squeezed. A median rent of $869 and a rent burden of just 18.6% — well beneath the nationally accepted 30% distress threshold — means that even Bowman County's renters have breathing room that would seem fantastical to someone paying market rate in Denver or Minneapolis.

The 24.4% vacancy rate deserves context rather than alarm. In sparsely populated agricultural counties, vacancy often reflects seasonal ranch housing, properties held within families, or the slow churn of an aging ownership class — not economic collapse.

An Aging, Stable Community

With 23.8% of residents over 65 and a median age of 42.7, Bowman County skews older than North Dakota's already-mature rural average. The 24.4% share of residents under 18 suggests the community isn't entirely without young families, but the pattern is familiar across the Great Plains: young adults leave for Bismarck, Fargo, or beyond, while retirees and established ranchers anchor the population. The limited English-speaking population of 18.2% likely reflects agricultural labor drawn from Latin America — a pattern common across cattle-producing counties in the western Dakotas.

FAQs

What makes Bowman County unique? Bowman County sits in one of the last truly affordable housing markets in America where incomes are simultaneously above the national average. The combination of oil revenue, ranching stability, and minimal speculative development pressure has produced a market where homeownership is attainable without extraordinary income — a rarity in the modern United States.

Is Bowman County affected by North Dakota's oil boom? Yes, indirectly. While the Bakken Formation's epicenter lies further north and east, southwestern North Dakota benefits from energy sector employment and the infrastructure spending it generates. This partly explains why incomes outperform national benchmarks despite the county's remote location and small workforce.

Is the high vacancy rate a warning sign for property values? Not necessarily. In agricultural counties, vacant units are frequently farm structures, seasonal dwellings, or family-held properties not actively marketed. The low poverty rate, strong incomes, and negligible rent burden suggest underlying economic health rather than the distress-driven vacancy seen in post-industrial Midwest communities.

Cities in Bowman County

Browse property data by city

More Counties in North Dakota

Access Bowman County, ND 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