Hood River County, OR
Property Data

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

Total Properties

14,617

Average Home Price

$701,491

Average Square Feet

2,074

Price per Sq Ft

$392

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
1,51111,045

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

14,617

Median Home Price

$640,000

Average Home Price

$701,491

Average Square Feet

2,074

Price per Sq Ft

$392

Recent Sales (12mo)

136

YoY Price Change

5.8%

Sales Velocity

83.8%

Where the River Bends — and So Does the Price Tag

Hood River County sits at one of the most dramatic intersections in the American West: the Columbia River Gorge, where Oregon meets Washington under skies that draw windsurfers, kiteboarders, and mountain bikers from across the globe. That magnetic landscape explains nearly everything unusual about this county's housing market. With just under 24,000 residents spread across 46 people per square mile, Hood River punches far above its population weight in terms of property values, lifestyle cachet, and economic inequality — all at once.

The median home price of $655,000 — sitting roughly 8x the county's median household income of $82,095 — is the central tension in Hood River's story. Nationally, a healthy price-to-income ratio hovers around 4x. Here, it's nearly double that. This is what happens when a small agricultural town becomes a world-class outdoor recreation destination: the Gorge doesn't get bigger, but demand from Portland commuters, remote workers, and vacation-home buyers absolutely does. Mount Hood to the south, the Columbia River to the north, and a two-lane highway connecting it all to Portland — roughly 60 miles west — has made Hood River the kind of place where a modest ranch house competes with an investment portfolio.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$655,000~8x median household income; nearly 2x national home value
Price-to-Income Ratio~8xvs. ~4x national benchmark — severe affordability gap
Homeownership Rate68.1%above state avg; but 20.7% of renters are severely cost-burdened
YoY Price Change+1.8%cooling from pandemic highs, but no correction in sight

The Inequality Hidden Behind the Scenery

A Gini index of 0.454 tells a complicated story. Hood River County is home to both orchard workers — a significant agricultural workforce reflected in the 15.8% of adults without a high school diploma and 11.6% with limited English proficiency — and affluent remote workers leveraging an 18.2% work-from-home rate that far exceeds national norms. The poverty rate of 5.5% is impressively low overall, and the child poverty rate of just 3.4% is genuinely remarkable. But 12.8% of households still use SNAP benefits, and the severe rent burden rate of 20.7% signals that for those who don't own, Hood River can be quietly brutal.

The vacancy rate of 11.6% deserves scrutiny. In a county this small and this desirable, that figure likely reflects second homes and seasonal properties sitting empty — a phenomenon common across Gorge-adjacent real estate — rather than a soft market.

The Remote Work Premium

With 96.6% computer access and 91.5% broadband penetration, Hood River has quietly become infrastructure-ready for the laptop class. The 18.2% work-from-home rate — well above the national average — points to a deliberate migration: people who chose Hood River because they could afford to, not because a job required it. That demand pressure, concentrated in a geographically constrained market with only 99 sales recorded in the last 12 months, means prices resist gravity even as rates rise.


FAQ: What makes Hood River County unique in Oregon's real estate market? Hood River is one of the few rural Oregon counties where median home prices rival Portland suburbs, driven by world-class outdoor recreation, a booming wine and agritourism industry, and remote-work migration from the Bay Area and Seattle — all compressed into a tight, gorge-locked geography that limits new supply.

FAQ: Is Hood River County affordable to live in? For owners who bought before 2018, yes. For new buyers or renters, increasingly not. With a price-to-income ratio nearly double the national benchmark and more than 1 in 5 renters severely cost-burdened, the county's affordability crisis is quiet but real — masked by low unemployment and a relatively low headline poverty rate.

FAQ: Are Hood River home prices dropping? The 1.8% year-over-year change suggests a meaningful cooling from the pandemic-era frenzy, but not a correction. With fewer than 100 sales in the past year and a structurally limited housing supply, Hood River's market is more likely to stagnate than decline sharply.

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