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Deschutes County isn't supposed to look like this. Tucked into the eastern slope of the Cascades, anchored by Bend — a former lumber town of 17,000 that has ballooned into a regional hub of 100,000+ — this high-desert county has quietly assembled a housing market that would be more at home in coastal California than central Oregon. A median home price of $625,000 against a median household income of $87,640 produces a price-to-income ratio approaching 7x, nearly double the national benchmark of 4x. For a county without a major port, a Fortune 500 headquarters, or a research university, that number demands an explanation.
The explanation is lifestyle migration, compounded by remote work, and accelerated by the pandemic. Bend has been one of America's most coveted relocation destinations for over a decade — drawn by world-class skiing at Mt. Bachelor, 300 days of sunshine, a craft beer culture that punches absurdly above its weight (Deschutes Brewery alone put the city on the national map), and trail systems that rival anything in the Mountain West. When remote work untethered knowledge workers from San Francisco, Seattle, and Portland, Deschutes County was ready and waiting. The result: a housing stock with a median build year of 2002 — unusually new for Oregon — reflecting the county's rapid modern expansion, yet prices that have already far outpaced local wage growth.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $625,000 | ~7.1x median household income vs. 4x national benchmark |
| Rent Burden Rate | 46.5% | Severe burden (23.5%) affects nearly 1 in 4 renters |
| Work From Home | 20.6% | Nearly 3x the national average — migration magnet in action |
| Vacancy Rate | 14.3% | High, yet prices keep climbing — a supply paradox |
At first glance, a 70.7% homeownership rate looks healthy — well above the national norm. But that figure masks a quiet crisis for the 29% who rent. With a median rent of $1,674 and a rent burden rate of 46.5%, nearly half of Deschutes renters are spending more than 30% of their income on housing. Nearly one in four faces severe rent burden, exceeding 50% of income. This is the structural consequence of a market reshaped by wealthy in-migrants: existing homeowners build equity while working-class renters — the ski instructors, restaurant workers, and healthcare aides who make the lifestyle economy run — are increasingly priced out or forced into long commutes from Redmond and Prineville.
The 14.3% vacancy rate is its own puzzle. In most markets, that level of vacancy softens prices. Here, it likely reflects a significant share of short-term rentals and second homes — the Sunriver resort community alone accounts for thousands of units that never enter the long-term rental market.
The median age of 42.6 and the 20.8% share of residents over 65 paint Deschutes County as increasingly a retirement and semi-retirement destination — a trend that reinforces both high homeownership rates and relatively modest labor force participation (63.1%). The 20.6% work-from-home rate is extraordinary: nationally, the figure sits around 8%. This is a county that has fundamentally reorganized around location-independent income, which explains how home prices can sustain at nearly twice the Oregon statewide median even as local wages remain solidly middle-class rather than tech-elite.
The Gini coefficient of 0.463 — notably high for a mid-sized western county — captures the tension. Deschutes isn't uniformly wealthy. Its 9.3% poverty rate and 11.7% child poverty rate are reminders that the amenity economy creates winners and losers, often living within miles of each other.
What makes Deschutes County unique in Oregon's housing market? Deschutes County has achieved coastal California-level home prices in an inland, mid-sized market with no dominant single employer — driven almost entirely by lifestyle migration, remote work, and outdoor recreation demand centered on Bend. It's one of the clearest examples in the American West of amenity-driven price inflation disconnected from local wage levels.
Is Bend, Oregon actually affordable to live in? For buyers, increasingly no. A median home at $625,000 against median local wages requires either significant outside wealth, remote high-income employment, or dual-income households. Renters face even sharper pressure, with nearly half spending beyond the recommended 30% threshold. Entry-level options exist — the P10 price point sits at $349,000 — but competition for affordable inventory is intense.
Why is Deschutes County's vacancy rate so high if housing is expensive? A large portion of the county's housing stock functions as short-term rentals or seasonal second homes, particularly in resort communities like Sunriver and Caldera Springs. These units inflate the total housing count without adding to the long-term rental or for-sale supply available to residents, keeping effective supply tight even as the headline vacancy figure looks loose.
Deschutes County is one of the largest real estate markets with over 115,305 properties in our database.
Properties in Deschutes County average $777,754, reflecting a competitive market.
The price per square foot of $362 reflects strong property valuations in this area.
Home prices in Deschutes County are 40% higher than the Oregon average.
| Metric | Deschutes County | Oregon Avg | vs State |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $777,754 | $556,962 | +40% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 2,147 | 1,932 | +11% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $362 | $288 | +26% |
| Properties | 115,305 | 2,360,853 | -95% |
Based on property sales data from the last 18 months
The average home price in Deschutes County, OR is $777,754, based on analysis of 115,305 properties in our database.
Our database includes 115,305 properties in Deschutes County, OR, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Deschutes County, OR is $362. This is calculated from an average home price of $777,754 and average size of 2,147 square feet.
Homes in Deschutes County, OR average 2,147 square feet, with an average price of $777,754.
Deschutes County, OR is one of 36 counties in Oregon with property data available. Browse other counties to compare market conditions and pricing.
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