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There's a puzzle buried in Okfuskee County's data that takes a moment to untangle. This rural Oklahoma county — home to just over 11,000 people spread across the Cross Timbers landscape west of Tulsa, anchored by the small city of Okemah, birthplace of Woody Guthrie — posted a jaw-dropping 55.2% year-over-year price increase on home sales. That's not a typo. And yet, median home values sit at $110,800, poverty touches more than a quarter of all residents, and only 17 properties sold in the last 12 months. The price spike isn't a boom. It's a statistical artifact of a paper-thin market where a handful of sales — likely a few higher-end rural properties or small farms trading hands — can swing the average dramatically. A market with only 50 tracked properties doesn't follow the same rules as Kansas City.
That context matters enormously when reading this county's story.
At $689 a month for median rent and homes priced well under $200,000, Okfuskee County looks affordable by any national metric. The price-to-income ratio is remarkably modest compared to the national benchmark of 4x — housing costs here don't crush budgets the way they do in coastal markets.
But affordability is meaningless without income, and that's where the county's structural challenge becomes clear. A 27.4% poverty rate — more than double the national average — and a child poverty rate approaching 36% reveal that cheap housing and financial stability are very different things. Nearly 1 in 5 residents relies on SNAP benefits. The uninsured rate of 15.2% is well above national norms. And with a labor force participation rate of just 42.9% — extraordinarily low even for a rural county with an older population — the economic engine here is running at reduced capacity.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Value | $110,800 | 65% below national median of $320,000 |
| Child Poverty Rate | 35.9% | Nearly 2.5x the national average |
| YoY Price Change | +55.2% | Driven by only 17 sales — statistically volatile |
| Labor Force Participation | 42.9% | Far below U.S. average of ~62% |
With 20.5% of households having no internet access and broadband penetration at 77%, Okfuskee County sits in the digital divide that defines much of rural Oklahoma. There is zero public transit. The county's 18 people per square mile means car dependence is near-total — and with limited employment locally, that isolation has real economic consequences. The 6.8% work-from-home rate suggests some residents have found ways to plug into remote economies, but it's not yet a transformative force here.
Okfuskee County carries a quietly significant place in American cultural history. Okemah was the birthplace of Woody Guthrie, the folk singer who became the voice of Depression-era displacement — an irony that feels pointed given the county's ongoing economic challenges. The area also has deep ties to the Muscogee (Creek) Nation, and the McGirt v. Oklahoma Supreme Court decision in 2020 significantly reshaped jurisdictional realities across this part of the state, with long-term implications for land ownership, taxation, and development that are still working through the system.
For cash buyers or investors comfortable with rural Oklahoma's illiquid market, entry prices are genuinely low — the 10th percentile of recent sales starts at $40,000. But the 18.2% vacancy rate signals weak housing demand, not hidden opportunity. The wide gap between P10 ($40,000) and P90 ($492,000) reflects an extremely fragmented market, not a healthy one. Buyers should treat recent price appreciation as noise, not trend.
Okfuskee County has 14,024 properties in our comprehensive database.
With an average price of $277,970, Okfuskee County offers mid-range housing options.
Buyers can expect to pay around $172 per square foot in this market.
Okfuskee County prices closely align with the Oklahoma average.
| Metric | Okfuskee County | Oklahoma Avg | vs State |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $277,970 | $273,150 | +2% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 1,615 | 1,914 | -16% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $172 | $143 | +20% |
| Properties | 14,024 | 2,816,471 | -100% |
Based on property sales data from the last 18 months
The average home price in Okfuskee County, OK is $277,970, based on analysis of 14,024 properties in our database.
Our database includes 14,024 properties in Okfuskee County, OK, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Okfuskee County, OK is $172. This is calculated from an average home price of $277,970 and average size of 1,615 square feet.
Homes in Okfuskee County, OK average 1,615 square feet, with an average price of $277,970.
Okfuskee County, OK is one of 77 counties in Oklahoma with property data available. Browse other counties to compare market conditions and pricing.
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