1133 Ranchland Drive

Property details·Mayfield Heights, Cuyahoga County, Ohio·861-08-089

3Beds
1Baths
1,134Sq ft
0.19Acres
1953Built
$156KLast sale

Location

Address

1133 Ranchland Drive

Mayfield Heights, OH 44124

Cuyahoga County

Parcel ID

861-08-089

Coordinates

41.529232, -81.469488

Building details

Bedrooms
3
Bathrooms
1
Square feet
1,134
Stories
1
Year built
1953
Garage
1-car A

Land & lot

Lot size
0.19 acres
Land area
8,120 sq ft
Frontage
578 ft
Subdivision
Clifvwld#2
Neighborhood
13401
Zoning
U-1(1)
Land use code
1001

Tax & assessment

CategoryAmount
Tax value$3,654.86
Market value$157,900
Assessed value$55,270
Building value$121,200
Land value$36,700

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

County context

Cuyahoga County 2026 Insights

Cuyahoga County, Ohio: Affordable Housing, Stubborn Inequality, and a Market Quietly Catching Fire

Cuyahoga County — home to Cleveland, one of America's most storied industrial cities — has long been the kind of place where working-class families could actually afford to buy a home. That story is still true, but it's getting more complicated. With median home prices sitting at roughly $196,500 and a price-per-square-foot of just $146, Cuyahoga remains dramatically cheaper than national norms. Yet beneath that surface affordability lies a county wrestling with deep inequality, aging housing stock, and a rental market that is quietly squeezing its most vulnerable residents.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$196,51139% below the national median of $320,000
YoY Price Change+10.8%well above typical Midwest appreciation rates
Rent Burden Rate44.0%far above the 30% healthy threshold
Gini Index0.504among the highest inequality scores in Ohio

The Affordability Paradox

Here's what makes Cuyahoga County genuinely puzzling: homes are cheap, but people are still struggling to pay rent. The median rent of $1,005/month sounds modest on paper, but against a median household income of $62,823 — already 16% below the national benchmark — it translates to a rent burden rate of 44%. Nearly one in four renter households (22.7%) face severe rent burden, spending more than half their income on housing. In a county where 40.9% of occupied units are rentals, that's a crisis affecting hundreds of thousands of people.

The SNAP participation rate of 16.5% and child poverty rate of 22.9% reinforce the picture: Cuyahoga's low sticker prices mask a labor market — 6.9% unemployment, 63.7% labor force participation — that simply doesn't generate enough income to keep pace, even with below-average costs.

Old Homes, New Prices

The median year built of 1951 tells the story of a county shaped by the postwar manufacturing boom, when Cleveland's steel mills, auto plants, and chemical corridors drew workers from across the country. Today, those bungalows and Cape Cods in neighborhoods like Parma, Lakewood, and Garfield Heights are appreciating at 10.8% year-over-year — a pace that would have seemed fantastical a decade ago when Cleveland was synonymous with urban decline and population loss.

That price surge partly reflects broader Rust Belt rediscovery: remote workers priced out of Columbus or Pittsburgh finding that a three-bedroom in suburban Cuyahoga for $180,000 is extraordinary value. The wide gap between the 10th percentile price ($72,000) and the 90th ($489,400) signals a county of two very different markets — distressed urban stock on one end, and gentrifying lakefront and inner-ring suburbs on the other.

A County Aging and Unequal

With 19% of the population over 65 and a Gini coefficient of 0.504 — a level more typically associated with large coastal metros than Midwest counties — Cuyahoga faces structural challenges that housing appreciation alone won't solve. The vacancy rate of 10% suggests the market still has slack, which could moderate price growth. But with limited new construction on aging land grids and infrastructure built for a population twice the current size, the county's housing story is less about scarcity than about matching the right inventory to the right buyers.


FAQs

What makes Cuyahoga County unique in the Ohio real estate market? Cuyahoga is Ohio's most densely populated county and its most economically complex. It combines genuinely affordable ownership prices with a rental affordability crisis, extreme income inequality, and housing stock that dates almost entirely to the industrial era — creating unusual tension between headline affordability and lived financial stress.

Is now a good time to buy a home in Cuyahoga County? For buyers with stable income, the math is compelling: at $146 per square foot and with a price-to-income ratio still well below national averages, Cuyahoga offers ownership opportunities that have largely vanished in peer metros. The 10.8% annual appreciation suggests momentum, but a 10% vacancy rate and aging housing stock mean buyers should budget carefully for maintenance on mid-century homes.

Why is rent burden so high in Cleveland if rents seem low? Because rent burden is relative to income, not to coastal benchmarks. A $1,005 median rent is affordable by San Francisco standards but burdensome against Cuyahoga's income distribution, where a significant share of renters work in service, healthcare, and logistics jobs that haven't kept pace with even modest rent increases over the past five years.

Local market context

Our database includes 6,969 properties in Mayfield Heights.

With an average price of $256,962, Mayfield Heights offers mid-range housing options.

Buyers can expect to pay around $164 per square foot in this market.

Mayfield Heights prices closely align with the Cuyahoga County average.

MetricMayfield HeightsCuyahoga Countyvs County
Average Price$256,962$258,784-1%
Avg Sq Ft1,5631,901-18%
Price/Sq Ft$164$136+21%
Properties6,969585,305-99%

Nearby properties

Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.

Frequently Asked Questions About Mayfield Heights, OH Real Estate

What is the average home price in Mayfield Heights, OH?

The average home price in Mayfield Heights, OH is $256,962, based on analysis of 6,969 properties in our database.

How many properties are tracked in Mayfield Heights, OH?

Our database includes 6,969 properties in Mayfield Heights, OH, providing comprehensive market coverage.

What is the price per square foot in Mayfield Heights, OH?

The average price per square foot in Mayfield Heights, OH is $164. This is calculated from an average home price of $256,962 and average size of 1,563 square feet.

What is the average home size in Mayfield Heights, OH?

Homes in Mayfield Heights, OH average 1,563 square feet, with an average price of $256,962.

How does Mayfield Heights, OH compare to other cities in Cuyahoga County?

Mayfield Heights, OH is one of many cities in Cuyahoga County, OH with property data available. Browse other cities in the county to compare market conditions and pricing.

Want more property data?

Access owner information, tax records, transfer history, and more through our API.

View API pricing

Access Cuyahoga County, OH 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