Hamilton County, OH
Property Data

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

Total Properties

437,268

Average Home Price

$339,151

Average Square Feet

1,793

Price per Sq Ft

$181

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
1019,728

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

437,268

Median Home Price

$258,000

Average Home Price

$339,151

Average Square Feet

1,793

Price per Sq Ft

$181

Recent Sales (12mo)

6,978

YoY Price Change

3.2%

Sales Velocity

71.8%

Hamilton County, Ohio: Cincinnati's Urban Core Tells a Tale of Two Markets

Hamilton County is Cincinnati. Not just in the administrative sense — the county is essentially the city and its immediate ring of suburbs, a dense urban core of 827,000 people wedged into southwest Ohio along the Kentucky border. And like most legacy Midwestern metros, it presents a real estate paradox: genuinely affordable housing stock sitting alongside a poverty crisis that suggests affordability alone doesn't solve everything.

The headline number is striking. At a median home price of $259,900, Hamilton County costs less than the national median home value of $320,000 by a significant margin — yet a 14.9% poverty rate and a child poverty rate approaching 20% tell you that purchasing power here is far from evenly distributed. Cincinnati has long grappled with concentrated poverty in neighborhoods like Over-the-Rhine's edges, Avondale, and Price Hill, even as the broader county median looks manageable on paper.

A Divided Market Hiding in Plain Sight

The single most revealing data point here is the gap between the 10th and 90th percentile home prices: $110,000 to $659,240. That's a 6-to-1 spread, and it maps almost perfectly onto the county's geography — from distressed urban neighborhoods and older inner-ring suburbs like Norwood and Lockland, to the affluent eastern corridor communities of Hyde Park, Indian Hill, and Anderson Township. The average sale price of $425,563 — nearly $170,000 above the median — confirms that high-end transactions are pulling the mean upward significantly.

This bifurcation is also why Hamilton County's Gini Index of 0.505 stands out. For context, a score above 0.5 typically signals extreme income inequality — on par with some of the most unequal major metros in the country. Cincinnati has historically ranked poorly on economic mobility studies, and this number reflects that structural reality.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$259,900~19% below national median
Gini Index0.505High inequality; above most Midwest peers
Severe Rent Burden24.0%Nearly 1 in 4 renters paying 50%+ of income on rent
YoY Price Change+5.2%Steady appreciation despite affordability pressures

The Renter Crisis Beneath the Affordable Surface

Here's where the data turns uncomfortable. While homeownership looks reasonable at 59%, the 41% of households who rent are facing genuine hardship. The median rent of $1,005 may sound low nationally, but with a rent burden rate of 44.7% and nearly a quarter of renters in severe rent burden (spending over half their income on housing), Cincinnati's rental market is quietly punishing. The city lacks the dramatic sticker-shock of Columbus or Cleveland's hottest submarkets, yet its lower wage base creates the same affordability squeeze in percentage terms.

The 7.4% vacancy rate is notable too — higher than a tight market but not high enough to bring rents down meaningfully, suggesting the vacant stock isn't aligned with what renters can actually afford.

What the Next Few Years Could Look Like

Cincinnati has been on a slow-burn revival trajectory. The Banks development, FC Cincinnati's TQL Stadium, and corporate relocations including Western & Southern's continued investment have added economic momentum. The 5.2% year-over-year price increase reflects genuine demand — particularly from buyers priced out of Columbus or attracted by remote work flexibility. With 13.7% of residents now working from home, the county is also retaining talent that once might have migrated to coastal markets.

The housing stock is old — median year built of 1956 — which creates both opportunity (character homes at accessible prices) and risk (deferred maintenance, renovation costs, lead paint liability in older neighborhoods).


FAQs

What makes Hamilton County, Ohio unique in the Midwest real estate market? Hamilton County offers one of the most bifurcated housing markets in the Midwest: genuinely low entry-level prices under $150,000 in legacy urban neighborhoods, while affluent eastern suburbs routinely trade above $600,000. This range, combined with one of the highest income inequality scores among major Ohio counties, makes it a market where price alone tells only half the story.

Is Cincinnati a good place to buy a home right now? For buyers with stable income, yes — the price-to-income ratio remains well below the national benchmark of 4x at roughly 3.7x median income, and 5%+ annual appreciation suggests the market isn't stagnating. However, buyers should factor in the age of housing stock and research neighborhood-level trends carefully, as conditions vary dramatically across Cincinnati's distinct communities.

Why is rent burden so high in Hamilton County if rents seem affordable? Median rent of ~$1,000/month looks cheap compared to coastal cities, but Hamilton County's wage base is lower than the national average. When you divide actual household incomes by actual rents across the full income distribution — not just the median — a large share of lower-income renters are spending well above the 30% threshold. Affordability is always relative to local incomes, not just to New York.

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