Lander County, NV
Property Data

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

Total Properties

8,965

Average Home Price

$217,579

Average Square Feet

1,713

Price per Sq Ft

$102

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
2,7725,705

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

8,965

Median Home Price

$42,500

Average Home Price

$217,579

Average Square Feet

1,713

Price per Sq Ft

$102

Recent Sales (12mo)

9

YoY Price Change

182.4%

Sales Velocity

-65.4%

Lander County, Nevada: The Arithmetic of Isolation

There's a data point in Lander County's housing market that stops you cold: a year-over-year price change of -72.6%. Before alarm bells ring, context matters enormously here. With only 29 recorded sales across 32 tracked properties in the past twelve months, a single transaction can swing the median by tens of thousands of dollars. This isn't a market in freefall — it's a market so thin it barely registers as a market at all. That's the defining reality of one of the least densely populated counties in the contiguous United States, averaging literally one person per square mile across nearly 6,000 square miles of Nevada high desert.

Lander County's seat, Battle Mountain, sits along I-80 between Reno and Elko, earning the town a notoriously unflattering 2001 Washington Post designation as "the armpit of America" — a label locals have worn with defiant pride ever since. But the real story here isn't about reputation. It's about copper, gold, and the boom-bust economics that shape every number in this dataset.

A Mining Economy, Laid Bare

The Cortez gold complex and nearby copper operations have long made Lander County's fortunes swing hard with commodity prices. That dynamic shows up in a household income of $84,474 — well above the national median of $75,149 — sitting alongside a 9.2% unemployment rate that's roughly double what you'd expect from a healthy local economy. Mining pays exceptionally well when it's running. When it isn't, there's very little else.

The labor force participation rate of 61.9% tells a similar story of intermittent, cyclical employment. The county's 11.7% SNAP participation rate and 11.4% poverty rate coexist with that above-average income figure because the wealth isn't evenly distributed — it clusters around active mine workers while the broader community includes many who've been left behind between cycles.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$42,500Among the lowest in the American West
Homeownership Rate66.9%Above national average despite economic volatility
Unemployment Rate9.2%~2x national benchmark despite above-median incomes
Rent Burden40.7%Well above the 30% threshold, despite low nominal rents

What the Housing Market Actually Looks Like

At a median home price of $42,500 and $108 per square foot, Lander County is among the most nominally affordable places in the American West. Yet a rent burden of 40.7% tells a more complicated story — renters here are genuinely stretched, not because rents are high in absolute terms ($1,066 median), but because the renting population tends to be those not captured in the mining wage premium.

The 17.9% vacancy rate and the fact that only 38.1% of housing units are single-family homes points to a stock heavily weighted toward manufactured housing and worker accommodations — practical structures for a transient workforce, not generational wealth builders.

Frequently Asked Questions

What makes Lander County unique? Few counties in America combine above-median household income with double-digit unemployment so starkly. It's a portrait of resource-extraction economics: high wages for those inside the mine gates, precarious conditions for everyone else — all playing out across a landscape where one person per square mile is considered crowded.

Is Lander County a good place to buy property? For buyers seeking rock-bottom entry prices in a remote but connected community (95.2% broadband access is remarkable for this geography), there's genuine affordability. But the tiny transaction volume, high vacancy rate, and commodity-dependent economy mean liquidity is nearly nonexistent. You may buy easily; selling on your timeline is another matter entirely.

Why is the limited English percentage so high? At 21.7%, it reflects the significant population of Spanish-speaking workers in Nevada's mining and agricultural labor force — a pattern consistent across rural Nevada counties where industrial operations recruit broadly across the Southwest and beyond.

Market Overview

Our database includes 8,965 properties in Lander County.

Lander County offers affordable housing with an average price of $217,579.

With a price per square foot of just $127, this area offers excellent value for buyers.

Frequently Asked Questions About Lander County, NV Real Estate

What is the average home price in Lander County, NV?

The average home price in Lander County, NV is $217,579, based on analysis of 8,965 properties in our database.

How many properties are tracked in Lander County, NV?

Our database includes 8,965 properties in Lander County, NV, providing comprehensive market coverage.

What is the price per square foot in Lander County, NV?

The average price per square foot in Lander County, NV is $127. This is calculated from an average home price of $217,579 and average size of 1,713 square feet.

What is the average home size in Lander County, NV?

Homes in Lander County, NV average 1,713 square feet, with an average price of $217,579.

How does Lander County, NV compare to other Nevada counties?

Lander County, NV is one of 17 counties in Nevada with property data available. Browse other counties to compare market conditions and pricing.

More Counties in Nevada

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