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There's a version of Adams County, Ohio that looks like a buyer's paradise. Median home prices sit at $135,000 — less than half the national median — and the rolling Appalachian foothills along the Ohio River offer a quality of rural life that no suburb can replicate. Serpent Mound, one of the most enigmatic prehistoric monuments in North America, sits here. The county has character, land, and space to breathe. But the headline affordability number obscures a more complicated story about economic fragility that the full dataset makes impossible to ignore.
A $135,000 median home price sounds like relief in an era of national housing unaffordability — until you place it against a median household income of $49,521 and a labor force participation rate of just 51%. That participation figure is striking. Nationally, about 63% of working-age adults are in the workforce. Adams County's gap reflects a combination of factors common to rural Appalachian Ohio: a higher-than-average disability rate of 22.2%, an aging population with a median age of 42.3, and a regional economy that has shed manufacturing and agricultural employment over decades without obvious replacements.
The poverty rate — 20.3% overall, and a sobering 30.5% among children — tells you that for a meaningful share of residents, even a $135,000 home is out of reach. One in five households relies on SNAP benefits. Nearly 18% of renters are severely cost-burdened, spending more than half their income on a median rent of just $700 per month. Cheap housing in an economy that can't generate income isn't a solution; it's the symptom.
The year-over-year price decline of -7.1% is the sharpest signal in the data. While most U.S. markets were absorbing or recovering from the post-pandemic correction, Adams County is sliding — likely a reflection of population pressure (or lack thereof), a 19.7% vacancy rate, and minimal in-migration demand. With only 285 sales in the past 12 months across a county of over 27,000 people, transaction volume is thin. The price spread between P10 ($39,900) and P90 ($380,000) is enormous relative to the median, suggesting a two-tier market: distressed and deteriorating stock at the bottom, and well-maintained rural properties or recreational land attracting weekend buyers at the top.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $135,000 | Less than half the $320,000 national median |
| YoY Price Change | -7.1% | Declining while most U.S. markets stabilize |
| Child Poverty Rate | 30.5% | 2x the national average of ~15% |
| Vacancy Rate | 19.7% | Nearly 1 in 5 housing units sits empty |
With only 7.4% of adults holding a bachelor's degree — compared to roughly 35% nationally — Adams County faces a structural workforce challenge that limits both the types of employers it can attract and the wages those employers would need to pay. Nearly 60% of adults have a high school diploma or less. This isn't a moral judgment; it reflects generations of limited educational infrastructure and economic opportunity in rural Appalachia. But it does help explain why the county struggles to retain young workers and why the 18+ population skews older.
What makes Adams County unique? Adams County is home to Serpent Mound, a 1,300-foot effigy mound built by Indigenous peoples and one of the largest of its kind in the world. The county also sits at the edge of the Appalachian hill country, giving it a cultural and geographic identity distinct from the flat agricultural counties of central Ohio — closer in spirit to Kentucky and West Virginia than to Columbus.
Is Adams County a good place to buy investment property? The low entry prices are tempting, but the 19.7% vacancy rate and -7.1% year-over-year price decline suggest weak demand fundamentals. Investors should weigh the cost of carrying vacant or distressed properties against limited rental income potential in a low-wage market where even $700/month rents burden nearly 40% of renters.
Why is the labor force participation rate so low in Adams County? A combination of factors: a 22.2% disability rate (well above national norms), an older median age, limited local employer diversity, and the geographic isolation of rural Appalachian Ohio all contribute. When jobs are scarce and workers face health barriers, many exit the labor force entirely rather than remain counted as unemployed.
Adams County has 30,430 properties in our comprehensive database.
Adams County offers affordable housing with an average price of $180,253.
With a price per square foot of just $107, this area offers excellent value for buyers.
Home prices in Adams County are 41% lower than the Ohio average.
| Metric | Adams County | Ohio Avg | vs State |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $180,253 | $304,895 | -41% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 1,677 | 1,598 | +5% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $107 | $191 | -44% |
| Properties | 30,430 | 7,613,659 | -100% |
Based on property sales data from the last 18 months
The average home price in Adams County, OH is $180,253, based on analysis of 30,430 properties in our database.
Our database includes 30,430 properties in Adams County, OH, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Adams County, OH is $107. This is calculated from an average home price of $180,253 and average size of 1,677 square feet.
Homes in Adams County, OH average 1,677 square feet, with an average price of $180,253.
Adams County, OH is one of 88 counties in Ohio with property data available. Browse other counties to compare market conditions and pricing.
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