Tillamook County, OR
Property Data

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

Total Properties

39,413

Average Home Price

$497,344

Average Square Feet

1,769

Price per Sq Ft

$330

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

Loading map...
Total Properties
40011,659

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

39,413

Median Home Price

$430,000

Average Home Price

$497,344

Average Square Feet

1,769

Price per Sq Ft

$330

Recent Sales (12mo)

557

YoY Price Change

0.1%

Sales Velocity

96.1%

Tillamook County, Oregon: Vacation Country With a Housing Paradox

Tillamook County is best known to the outside world for two things: fog-shrouded coastal highway scenery and the orange wheels of cheddar cheese that bear its name. But behind the pastoral image lies one of Oregon's more quietly complex housing markets — a place where extraordinary vacancy rates coexist with genuine affordability pressure, and where the median resident is nearly 49 years old.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Value$421,00032% above national median
Homeownership Rate73.2%well above national avg of ~65%
Vacancy Rate38.1%nearly 4x the national average of ~10%
Rent Burden39.7%above the 30% stress threshold

The Vacancy Paradox

That 38.1% vacancy rate is the number that demands explanation. Nearly four in ten housing units in Tillamook County sit unoccupied on any given census survey day — not because the county is struggling, but largely because it's a destination. The Oregon Coast between Cannon Beach and Pacific City is saturated with vacation cabins, weekend retreats, and short-term rentals owned by Portland and Salem households who never show up in local population counts. This is fundamentally a second-home economy wearing the statistical clothing of a distressed market.

The paradox is real, though: those same vacation-driven property values price out the hospitality workers, dairy farmers, and retail employees who actually live here year-round. A $421,000 median home price against a $66,551 household income produces a price-to-income ratio of roughly 6.3x — well above the 4x national benchmark and quietly punishing for a workforce that skews toward seasonal and agricultural employment.

An Aging, Working-Class Community

The median age of 48.9 years places Tillamook among Oregon's oldest counties — not surprising for a scenic coastal community attracting retirees and near-retirees, but worth understanding in its economic consequences. Labor force participation has fallen to just 49.8%, driven in part by that older age profile. Only 16.7% of residents hold a bachelor's degree, compared to roughly 35% nationally, and the 15.8% work-from-home rate suggests the remote-work migration wave did find its way here — likely contributing to the modest but real home price appreciation of the pandemic years, even as the most recent year-over-year change has cooled to just 0.6%.

A 20.4% disability rate and 16.3% SNAP enrollment paint a picture of a working-class population that is stretched thin. Child poverty at 15.6% is notably higher than the overall poverty rate of 12%, suggesting the economic squeeze hits younger families hardest — precisely the demographic the county needs to retain to avoid further demographic hollowing.

What the Renters Know

Renters here face a particularly tight spot. With a median rent of $1,169 and 39.7% of renters cost-burdened, the rental market offers little relief from the ownership-affordability gap. Short-term rental platforms have almost certainly compressed the long-term rental supply along the coast, a dynamic playing out in vacation counties from Cape Cod to Lake Tahoe.


What makes Tillamook County unique? It's one of Oregon's most prominent vacation-home counties, where a massive short-term rental and second-home market inflates vacancy statistics and property values simultaneously — creating affordability stress for a predominantly working-class, aging permanent population.

Is Tillamook a good place to buy a vacation home? Appreciation has been modest (0.6% year-over-year) after pandemic-era run-ups, and with nearly 40% of housing units vacant at any given time, supply is not the constraint it appears to be in primary housing markets. Buyers should weigh STR regulatory trends in Oregon carefully before assuming rental income offsets carrying costs.

Why is Tillamook County's population so old? The combination of retiring in-migrants attracted by coastal scenery and affordability (relative to Portland), departing young adults seeking education and employment elsewhere, and limited industry beyond dairy, tourism, and fishing has steadily pushed the median age toward 49 — a trajectory common to scenic rural counties across the Pacific Northwest.

More Counties in Oregon

Access Tillamook County, OR Property Data Through Our Enterprise API

Get instant access to comprehensive county assessors-based property data with your free API key

Need Bulk Data?

Email us at hello@realie.ai