7 South Monroe Street

Property details·South Mount Vernon, Knox County, Ohio·66-01742.001

1.81Acres

Location

Address

7 South Monroe Street

South Mount Vernon, OH 43050

Knox County

Parcel ID

66-01742.001

Coordinates

40.381518, -82.494239

Land & lot

Lot size
1.81 acres
Land area
78,800 sq ft
Neighborhood
41203
Land use code
9210

Tax & assessment

CategoryAmount
Market value$14,930
Assessed value$5,230
Land value$14,930

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

County context

Knox County 2026 Insights

Knox County, Ohio: Affordable Heartland With a Quiet Affordability Paradox

Knox County sits in the rolling hills of central Ohio, anchored by Mount Vernon — a compact county seat with a genuine Main Street, a storied glassmaking heritage, and Kenyon College tucked eight miles south in the village of Gambier. It's the kind of place that rarely makes national real estate headlines, which is precisely what makes its housing data worth examining closely.

At first glance, the story looks like a homebuyer's dream. With a median home price of just $116,375 and a price-per-square-foot of $85, Knox County sits at roughly one-third the national median home value. The county's price-to-income ratio hovers around 1.6x — extraordinarily low against the national benchmark of 4x. For buyers priced out of Columbus (just 45 miles southwest) or any coastal market, Knox County can look like a portal to another era of American housing affordability.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$116,375~36% of the $320K national median
Homeownership Rate75.1%well above national avg (~65%)
Rent Burden Rate41.5%far exceeds 30% healthy threshold
YoY Price Change+5.7%steady appreciation despite low base

The Rent Burden Paradox

Here's where the story gets complicated. Despite some of the most accessible purchase prices in Ohio, Knox County renters are being squeezed hard. With a median rent of $925 and a rent burden rate of 41.5% — where more than 18% face severe burden — the county's roughly 5,800 renter households are spending far more than what housing economists consider healthy. In a county where per capita income is $34,636 and college attainment sits at just 15.8% (compared to roughly 23% statewide), renters often lack the savings or credit profile to convert to ownership, even at these prices. They're trapped in a thin, expensive rental market rather than benefiting from the affordability that surrounds them.

A Working County With Blue-Collar Roots

Knox County's 2.5% unemployment rate is impressively tight — lower than the national rate and reflecting a manufacturing and trades economy that kept people employed through broader Ohio's industrial transitions. Cooper Tire (now Goodyear), healthcare through Knox Community Hospital, and Kenyon College itself form a diverse employment base unusual for a county this size. Labor force participation at 60.5% is modest, partly explained by an aging population (18.7% over 65) and a disability rate of 13.2% that tracks with the physical demands of the county's dominant industries.

The 10.8% rate of households with no internet access is a quiet concern — broadband gaps in rural Knox townships could limit remote work uptake and economic mobility, even as 11.4% of workers already log on from home.

What the Next Five Years May Look Like

With prices appreciating at 5.7% annually from an already low base, and Columbus's sprawl pushing ever northward, Knox County faces a familiar rural-adjacent dilemma: rising values are good news for the three-quarters of residents who own, but incrementally price out the renters and young families who need that entry point most.


What makes Knox County unique in Ohio's housing market? Knox County combines near-bottom purchase prices with surprisingly high rent burden — a paradox driven by low renter incomes and a thin rental supply, making it affordable to buy but genuinely difficult to rent.

Is Knox County being affected by Columbus's housing spillover? Increasingly yes. The 45-mile commute to Columbus is long but manageable, and rising Columbus prices are nudging buyers to look at Mount Vernon and surrounding townships. The 5.7% annual appreciation suggests that pressure is already arriving.

Why is college attainment so low despite Kenyon College's presence? Kenyon is a small, highly selective liberal arts college whose students and faculty are largely transient — they don't substantially reshape the county's broader educational profile, which remains rooted in manufacturing, trades, and agriculture.

Nearby properties

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