Lucas County, OH
Property Data

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

Total Properties

205,374

Average Home Price

$200,478

Average Square Feet

1,899

Price per Sq Ft

$124

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
15415,863

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

205,374

Median Home Price

$158,000

Average Home Price

$200,478

Average Square Feet

1,899

Price per Sq Ft

$124

Recent Sales (12mo)

3,658

YoY Price Change

10.9%

Sales Velocity

86.9%

Toledo's Hidden Housing Story: Lucas County's Affordability Masks a Deeper Divide

Lucas County — home to Toledo and the western edge of Lake Erie's shoreline — is one of the most genuinely affordable housing markets in the Midwest, and that affordability isn't going away quietly. Median home prices sit at just $155,000, less than half the national benchmark of $320,000, and at roughly 2.6 times the county's median household income, the price-to-income ratio would make a San Francisco homebuyer weep with envy. But beneath those appealing numbers, a more complicated story is unfolding.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Value$155,00052% below national median of $320,000
YoY Price Change+13.9%one of Ohio's sharpest recent run-ups
Rent Burden Rate41.5%well above the 30% threshold considered healthy
Child Poverty Rate25.1%one in four children — a structural warning sign

The Affordability Paradox

Here's the tension that defines Lucas County's housing market right now: homes are cheap by almost any national standard, yet renters are being squeezed hard. Nearly 42% of renters spend more than 30% of their income on rent — a figure that exceeds the distress threshold — and almost 22% face severe rent burden, meaning housing consumes more than half their paycheck. With median rent at $911 and a median household income of $60,095, the math only works if you're earning above the county median. Toledo's legacy as a blue-collar manufacturing hub means a significant share of households aren't.

The 13.9% year-over-year price appreciation is where this gets particularly interesting. For a post-industrial Rust Belt county with a 6.8% unemployment rate — well above Ohio's state average — that kind of price growth is unexpected. It likely reflects a combination of remote-worker migration from pricier Midwest metros like Columbus and Cleveland, extremely low entry-level inventory, and investors snapping up the county's abundant aging housing stock (median build year: 1951) as rental properties.

Toledo's Structural Headwinds

The county's Gini index of 0.488 signals meaningful income inequality — comparable to some Sun Belt metros known for stark wealth gaps, not the Midwest's traditionally more compressed wage distribution. Pair that with a 17.8% poverty rate, a 16.6% SNAP participation rate, and the fact that only 17.7% of residents hold a bachelor's degree, and it becomes clear why price appreciation isn't being felt equally across the county.

The 9.3% housing vacancy rate is telling, too. Toledo has long wrestled with blight and abandonment in its older neighborhoods, the kind of structural vacancy that pulls down assessed values even as the upper end of the market accelerates. The P10-to-P90 price spread — from $50,000 to $385,000 — captures exactly this bifurcation.

What the Next Five Years May Look Like

Toledo has real assets: proximity to Detroit's auto supply chain, a revitalized riverfront, the University of Toledo's research programs, and housing costs that remain extraordinary value by any coastal comparison. The question isn't whether Lucas County is affordable — it clearly is for buyers. The question is whether wage and income growth can keep pace with a housing market that just posted near-double-digit appreciation, before the affordability window that defines this county's appeal quietly closes.


FAQ

What makes Lucas County, Ohio unique in the housing market? Lucas County offers some of the lowest home prices of any mid-sized Rust Belt county in the country, with a price-to-income ratio well under 3x — but it's simultaneously experiencing some of Ohio's fastest recent appreciation, creating a narrowing window of opportunity for first-time buyers.

Is Toledo, Ohio a good place to invest in real estate? The combination of sub-$200K average prices, a 13.9% annual price gain, and a large renter population (38% of occupied units) makes Lucas County attractive to investors — though the 9.3% vacancy rate and aging housing stock (most homes built before 1955) mean due diligence on individual properties is essential.

Why is rent burden so high in Lucas County if home prices are so low? Rent burden reflects income relative to rent, not just rent levels in isolation. Toledo's median household income of $60,095 is well below the national average, and a significant share of renters earn considerably less than that — making even a $911 median rent a stretch for many households.

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