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Eureka County is one of the least densely populated places in the contiguous United States — roughly 0.4 people per square mile across a swath of the Great Basin that most Americans have never heard of and could not locate on a map. With just 1,660 residents spread across 4,176 square miles, it is simultaneously a functioning county government, a legitimate census geography, and something that barely qualifies as a neighborhood by urban standards. That tension produces data that looks broken at first glance but reveals, on closer inspection, a fascinating portrait of rural Nevada's extractive economy.
Start with the most jarring figure: a mean household income of over $51 million. That is not a typo. A small number of extraordinarily wealthy households — likely tied to Eureka County's active gold and silver mining operations, which have made it one of Nevada's most productive mining counties per capita for over 150 years — pull the average so far from the median ($73,095) that the gap becomes almost comic. The Gini coefficient of 0.387 confirms genuine inequality beneath the surface, even in a county you could fit entirely into a mid-sized football stadium's worth of human beings.
The zero percent unemployment rate is equally disorienting, until you notice that labor force participation sits at just 41.5%. In a county dominated by an aging population (median age of 50.1, with nearly a quarter of residents 65 or older), many people have simply exited the workforce entirely. Those who are working are working — mining operations don't really do half-measures.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Homeownership Rate | 85.4% | Among the highest in the nation; national avg ~65% |
| Vacancy Rate | 38.2% | Suggests large stock of seasonal/worker housing |
| Child Poverty Rate | 45.1% | Striking contrast to near-zero unemployment |
| Severe Rent Burden | 39.1% | All rent-burdened households are severely burdened |
Perhaps the most genuinely alarming number here is the child poverty rate of 45.1% — nearly half of all children living below the poverty line — in a county with no measurable unemployment and a median household income close to the national average. This points to a two-tier labor market: well-compensated mining and extraction workers on one hand, and a lower-income population (reflected partly in the 15.6% with limited English proficiency) working support and service roles with far less economic security. The SNAP utilization rate of just 3% suggests this vulnerable population may also be under-enrolled in safety net programs, a common challenge in remote rural counties with limited social service infrastructure.
The 85.4% homeownership rate — with only 14.6% of households renting — is extraordinary. Combine that with a median rent of $940 and a 38.2% vacancy rate, and you get a housing market defined by worker camps, company housing, and long-term locals who bought decades ago. This isn't a market with buyers competing over listings. It's a market that barely exists as a market at all.
FAQ: What makes Eureka County, Nevada unique? Eureka County is one of the most sparsely populated counties in the lower 48 states and remains an active gold and silver mining hub, giving it an economic profile completely unlike any other place its size. The extreme gap between its mean and median household income reflects the outsized wealth generated by mining operations sitting alongside a broader population with far more modest means.
FAQ: Is it affordable to live in Eureka County? On paper, yes — rents are below $1,000 and homeownership is near-universal. But the severe rent burden rate suggests that the small renter population is stretched thin, and child poverty rates reveal that affordability is deeply uneven depending on which tier of the local economy you work in.
FAQ: Why is the vacancy rate so high in Eureka County? A 38.2% vacancy rate likely reflects the boom-and-bust nature of mining-driven housing demand. Temporary worker accommodations, seasonal use properties, and housing stock built during previous mining expansions sit empty between cycles — a pattern common across Nevada's historic mining corridor.
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