1661 Ash Avenue

Property details·Las Cruces, Doña Ana County, New Mexico·4-008-134-048-103

3Beds
2Baths
1,032Sq ft
0.09Acres
1984Built

Location

Address

1661 Ash Avenue

Las Cruces, NM 88001

Doña Ana County

Parcel ID

4-008-134-048-103

Coordinates

32.327505, -106.767147

Building details

Bedrooms
3
Bathrooms
2
Square feet
1,032
Stories
1
Year built
1984
Fireplace
Yes

Land & lot

Lot size
0.09 acres
Land area
3,723 sq ft
Subdivision
Country Club Mesa Addition
Neighborhood
E02
Zoning
MED-FAM-RES
Land use code
1002

Tax & assessment

CategoryAmount
Tax value$1,438.24
Market value$142,461
Assessed value$47,487
Building value$117,461
Land value$25,000

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

County context

Doña Ana County 2026 Insights

Doña Ana County, New Mexico: Where Affordability Masks a Deeper Squeeze

On paper, Doña Ana County looks like one of America's more affordable housing markets. A median home value of $205,400 — roughly 36% below the national median — sounds like a buyer's paradise, particularly for households priced out of Albuquerque or the booming Sun Belt metros to the east and west. But dig beneath that headline number and a more complicated story emerges: one of high ownership rates sitting alongside some of the most severe rent burdens in the Southwest, in a county where nearly one in four children lives in poverty.

This is the Mesilla Valley — home to Las Cruces, New Mexico State University, and a border economy that straddles two nations and two very different income realities.

The Ownership Paradox

A 65.3% homeownership rate is genuinely impressive for a county with a poverty rate of 22.2% — well above the 13.5% national average. In most high-poverty regions, ownership tends to track downward with income. Here, it doesn't, and that reflects something real about the county's cultural fabric: multigenerational land ownership, modest but accessible price points, and a large share of families who have put down roots in the Mesilla Valley for generations.

The flipside is brutal for renters. With a median rent of $903 and a median household income that implies a comfortable rent threshold around $1,390, you'd expect manageable rent burdens. Instead, 48% of renters are rent-burdened — exceeding the 30% threshold — and a stunning 24.5% face severe rent burden, spending more than half their income on housing. This suggests the rental market is heavily bifurcated: renters in Doña Ana County tend to be lower-income workers, students, and recent arrivals who aren't capturing the county's modest income averages.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Value$205,40036% below national median
Severe Rent Burden24.5%Nearly 1 in 4 renters paying 50%+ of income on housing
Child Poverty Rate28.1%More than double the national average
SNAP Participation23.7%Reflects deep food insecurity alongside low wages

The University and the Border

NMSU's presence in Las Cruces shapes the county's demographics in ways that complicate any simple narrative. A median age of just 34, a 30.7% school enrollment rate, and the unusually high share of residents with some college but no degree (28.4%) all point to a community cycling through higher education without always completing it — a common pattern in universities that serve first-generation and low-income students. The county's 13.7% graduate degree rate is actually respectable for its income level, reflecting NMSU faculty, researchers, and the overflow of El Paso's professional class crossing the state line.

Proximity to El Paso — one of Texas's largest metros — is arguably the county's defining economic variable. Many residents commute across the border for higher-paying Texas jobs while living in New Mexico for lower housing costs and state-specific benefits. That cross-border dynamic helps explain the low public transit use (0.3%) despite meaningful density in Las Cruces itself: this is a car-dependent, commuter-oriented economy.

The 11.6% limited English speaking population and 6.9% unemployment rate — nearly double the 2024 national rate — both reflect the structural realities of a border economy where labor market access remains uneven.

What to Watch

The 8.6% vacancy rate is a canary worth watching. It's high enough to suggest the market isn't dramatically undersupplied, yet rents are still devouring renters' incomes. That disconnect points less to a supply problem than an income problem — wages that simply haven't kept pace with even modest rent growth.


FAQs

What makes Doña Ana County unique in New Mexico's real estate market? Doña Ana County occupies a rare position: it's anchored by a major research university, borders one of Texas's largest cities, and maintains a homeownership rate that defies its poverty statistics. The result is a housing market that looks affordable from the outside but delivers significant financial stress to its renter population — making it a study in how low home prices don't automatically translate to housing security.

Is Las Cruces a good place to buy a home right now? For buyers with stable income, the price-to-income ratio remains one of the more manageable in the region. But prospective buyers should factor in the county's 6.9% unemployment rate and limited wage growth. The market rewards those with job security — particularly government, university, or remote workers — far more than it does those dependent on the local private sector economy.

Why is the rent burden so high if rents seem relatively low? The median rent of $903 looks affordable in absolute terms, but Doña Ana County's renter population skews heavily toward lower-wage workers, students, and part-time employees whose incomes fall well below the county median. When you earn $25,000–$35,000 a year, even $900 in monthly rent consumes a disproportionate share of take-home pay — a dynamic that the county's high SNAP participation rate (23.7%) makes vividly clear.

Nearby properties

Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.

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