Mahoning County, OH
Property Data

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

Total Properties

178,657

Average Home Price

$206,415

Average Square Feet

1,851

Price per Sq Ft

$126

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
9324,639

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

178,657

Median Home Price

$170,000

Average Home Price

$206,415

Average Square Feet

1,851

Price per Sq Ft

$126

Recent Sales (12mo)

1,914

YoY Price Change

9.4%

Sales Velocity

80.4%

Youngstown's Shadow: The Housing Market That Defies Gravity

Mahoning County, Ohio — the greater Youngstown area — is one of the most economically scarred regions in the American Rust Belt, and yet its housing market is doing something that would have seemed impossible a decade ago: it's booming. A 15.1% year-over-year price increase in a county where median household income sits at $55,576 — roughly 26% below the national median — tells a story that is equal parts opportunity and anxiety.

This is a place defined by its industrial past. The Mahoning Valley was once the steel capital of the world, and the collapse of that industry beginning in the late 1970s left wounds that are still visible in the data: a 6.4% unemployment rate nearly double the national norm, an 18.3% poverty rate, and a child poverty rate of 26.7% that should give anyone pause. One in five residents is over 65, a demographic profile that reflects decades of outmigration by working-age adults seeking opportunity elsewhere.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$165,000less than half the national median of $320,000
YoY Price Change+15.1%one of the steepest run-ups in the Midwest
Rent Burden Rate43.7%far above the 30% stress threshold
Homeownership Rate70.3%well above the national average of ~65%

The Affordability Paradox

At first glance, Mahoning County looks like a buyer's paradise. Homes are trading at roughly 3x median household income — well below the national benchmark of 4x and a far cry from the 8–10x ratios suffocating markets in Columbus or Cleveland's inner suburbs. You can still buy a livable single-family home here for under $55,000 (the 10th percentile price point), and 77.7% of the housing stock is detached single-family — exactly what remote workers and investors have been hunting since 2020.

That's precisely the problem. Outside capital has found Youngstown. Investors drawn by rock-bottom acquisition prices and respectable rental yields have been quietly buying up the county's older housing stock — median year built is 1957 — pushing prices up at a rate that local wages simply cannot track. The result is a rent burden rate of 43.7%, with more than one in five renters experiencing severe rent burden. In a county where the median rent is just $775, that math reveals how precarious household finances truly are.

What the Vacancy Rate Tells You

A 9.1% vacancy rate is high by national standards and speaks to decades of population loss — Youngstown's city population has shrunk by roughly 60% since its 1930 peak. But vacancy is also inventory, and in today's market, that inventory is moving. Over 1,450 sales closed in the past twelve months alone.

The limited English-speaking population of 14.9% points to one bright spot: new immigrant communities, particularly from Central America and Southeast Asia, have been quietly revitalizing neighborhoods that long-time residents had written off, a pattern documented in local journalism but not yet fully reflected in regional economic narratives.


FAQs

What makes Mahoning County unique in Ohio's real estate market? Mahoning County offers some of the lowest absolute home prices of any Ohio metro county while simultaneously experiencing some of the state's fastest appreciation — a combination that reflects both deep structural poverty and intense outside investor interest in undervalued Rust Belt assets.

Is Youngstown, Ohio a good place to invest in real estate? The 15.1% annual price growth and sub-$165,000 median make it attractive on paper, but investors should weigh the county's high rent burden (43.7%), elevated vacancy rate (9.1%), and aging housing stock heavily — deferred maintenance on 1950s-era homes can erode returns quickly.

Why is poverty so high in Mahoning County despite relatively affordable housing? Affordability is a supply-side metric; Mahoning County's poverty reflects a demand-side collapse — the steel industry's exit removed the high-wage employment base, and decades of outmigration left behind a population with limited access to equivalent-paying work, resulting in high poverty even where housing costs are low.

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