Property details·Sherwood, Clackamas County, Oregon·31W04D 01100
25800 Southwest Meadowbrook Lane
Sherwood, OR 97140
Clackamas County
31W04D 01100
45.333201, -122.807701
| Category | Amount | Year |
|---|---|---|
| Tax value | $8,503.33 | 2026 |
| Market value | $850,610 | 2025 |
| Assessed value | $501,920 | 2026 |
| Building value | $348,730 | — |
| Land value | $501,880 | — |
Values reflect public tax roll data as of the year shown.
County context
There's a quiet contradiction at the heart of Clackamas County. On paper, this is one of Oregon's most prosperous places — a county of forested suburbs, horse farms, and lakefront properties southeast of Portland, where household incomes run a third higher than the national median. Yet tucked beneath that prosperity is a rent burden figure that reads more like a stressed urban core than a leafy suburban county: more than half of renters here spend beyond the 30% affordability threshold, and over a quarter are severely cost-burdened.
That tension — wealth alongside genuine housing strain — defines the Clackamas story right now.
With a 71.3% homeownership rate and a median home value of $610,000, Clackamas County skews decisively toward owners. The county's housing stock is heavily single-family (68.1% of units), built largely during the suburban expansion of the 1980s — the median year built of 1986 tells that story cleanly — and concentrated in communities like Lake Oswego, West Linn, and Happy Valley. These are among the most sought-after zip codes in the Portland metro, drawing professionals who can afford to pay six figures for a house but still want proximity to the city's jobs.
The price-to-income ratio of roughly 6.1x sits well above the national benchmark of 4x, but given the county's $100,360 median household income — nearly $25,000 above the Oregon state median — it remains more digestible here than in comparably priced markets. The spread between the 10th percentile price ($370,200) and the 90th ($1.18 million) reflects a genuinely bifurcated market: affordable entry-level homes in places like Molalla and Estacada sit worlds apart from the lakefront estates of Oswego that pull averages upward.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $610,000 | ~6.1x local median income |
| Homeownership Rate | 71.3% | well above national avg of ~65% |
| Severe Rent Burden | 26.8% | over 1-in-4 renters in crisis |
| Work From Home | 19.0% | nearly double pre-pandemic norms |
The 28.7% of Clackamas households who rent face a punishing market. A median rent of $1,693 against incomes that — for renters specifically — skew considerably lower than the county average creates a structural squeeze. This isn't unusual in the Portland suburbs, where zoning has historically resisted density and multifamily construction, but Clackamas has been slower than Washington County to permit new apartment stock. The result: renters competing for limited inventory, with landlords holding pricing power.
The 19% remote work rate is reshaping demand, too. Workers no longer tethered to Portland offices are willing to pay more to stay in Clackamas permanently rather than commute, pushing rents and purchase prices upward simultaneously.
With a median age of 42.1 and nearly one in five residents over 65, Clackamas is aging faster than Oregon as a whole — a trend that will influence housing demand significantly over the next decade as seniors downsize or enter assisted living. The county's low vehicle-free rate (just 1.7%) and minimal public transit use (1.9%) reflect infrastructure built for suburban car culture, which may become a liability for aging residents and a barrier to attracting younger workers who increasingly prefer walkability.
The educational profile — 25.5% bachelor's degrees, 14.2% graduate degrees — is solid but trails the tech-heavy concentrations found in Washington County's Silicon Forest corridor. That said, the county's 92.9% broadband access and near-universal computer ownership suggest a workforce well-equipped for the remote economy.
What makes Clackamas County unique? Clackamas sits at an unusual intersection: it has the income profile and homeownership rates of an affluent suburb, but the rent burden statistics of a supply-constrained urban county. Add in dramatic geographic variation — from urban-edge Lake Oswego to rural Cascades foothills — and you have one of the most internally diverse housing markets in the Pacific Northwest.
Is Clackamas County affordable compared to Portland? It depends entirely on whether you're buying or renting, and where. Buyers with strong incomes and stable employment can access more space per dollar than inner Portland — the average home runs about 2,197 square feet at $311/sqft. But renters face a market almost as punishing as the city itself, with limited multifamily inventory and rents that consume a disproportionate share of household income.
Why are home prices still rising in Clackamas County despite higher interest rates? The county's 2.5% year-over-year appreciation reflects constrained supply more than explosive demand. Low vacancy (5.7%), restrictive single-family zoning, and strong owner retention in a high-equity environment means very few homes actually hit the market — keeping prices sticky even as affordability erodes.
Our database includes 705 properties in Sherwood.
The average home price of $1.6M positions Sherwood as a premium real estate market.
The price per square foot of $493 reflects strong property valuations in this area.
Home prices in Sherwood are 119% higher than the Clackamas County average.
| Metric | Sherwood | Clackamas County | vs County |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $1,600,189 | $731,801 | +119% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 3,244 | 2,220 | +46% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $493 | $330 | +49% |
| Properties | 705 | 187,493 | -100% |
Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.
The average home price in Sherwood, OR is $1,600,189, based on analysis of 705 properties in our database.
Our database includes 705 properties in Sherwood, OR, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Sherwood, OR is $493. This is calculated from an average home price of $1,600,189 and average size of 3,244 square feet.
Homes in Sherwood, OR average 3,244 square feet, with an average price of $1,600,189.
Sherwood, OR is one of many cities in Clackamas County, OR with property data available. Browse other cities in the county to compare market conditions and pricing.
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