Property details·New Brighton Borough, Beaver County, Pennsylvania·39-007-1316.000
804 14th Street
New Brighton Borough, PA 15066
Beaver County
39-007-1316.000
40.730507, -80.305423
| Category | Amount | Year |
|---|---|---|
| Tax value | $1,526.22 | 2026 |
| Market value | $36,900 | 2024 |
| Assessed value | $18,450 | 2026 |
| Land value | $36,900 | — |
Values reflect public tax roll data as of the year shown.
County context
There's a version of the Rust Belt story that's purely about decline — shuttered mills, hollowed-out downtowns, population bleed. Beaver County tells a more complicated tale. Sitting just 30 miles northwest of Pittsburgh along the Ohio River, this former steel manufacturing heartland is genuinely affordable by almost any national measure, yet beneath the surface lies a housing market under unexpected pressure, an aging population navigating economic transition, and a county quietly caught between its industrial past and an uncertain petrochemical future.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Value | $185,500 | 42% below national median of $320,000 |
| Homeownership Rate | 74.5% | well above national avg of ~65% |
| YoY Price Change | +8.5% | outpacing most of Pennsylvania |
| Rent Burden Rate | 38.0% | above the 30% threshold despite low rents |
The headline number — a median home price of $195,500 — would make a homebuyer in Boston or Denver weep with envy. At roughly 2.8x the median household income, Beaver County's price-to-income ratio sits well below the national benchmark of 4x, making homeownership genuinely accessible. The 74.5% homeownership rate confirms it: this is a place where working families buy houses, not just aspire to.
But renters tell a different story. A median rent of $867 per month sounds modest in absolute terms, yet 38% of renters here are considered cost-burdened — paying more than 30% of their income toward housing. When rents are low but so are incomes, affordability stress concentrates among the most economically vulnerable. With a child poverty rate of 15.2% and 13.8% of households on SNAP benefits, that burden falls disproportionately on families least able to absorb it.
Beaver County's median age of 44.7 — meaningfully older than the national figure — isn't incidental. More than one in five residents is 65 or older, a legacy of decades-long outmigration of younger workers following the collapse of the steel industry in the 1980s. The 15.6% disability rate and above-average public assistance enrollment reflect a population that came of age in physically demanding industrial work.
The Shell Pennsylvania Petrochemicals Complex in Potter Township — a massive ethane cracker plant that came online in recent years — was supposed to rewrite this story, bringing construction jobs and downstream industrial investment. The plant has generated employment, but the transformational economic renaissance some predicted hasn't yet materialized in the census data.
A median construction year of 1954 might raise eyebrows elsewhere, but in Beaver County it means spacious mid-century single-family homes — which make up 75.8% of the housing stock — priced at just $147 per square foot. The wide spread between the 10th percentile ($55,000) and 90th percentile ($472,000) signals genuine stratification: distressed properties coexist with well-maintained riverfront and hilltop homes that attract Pittsburgh commuters seeking space.
That Pittsburgh commuter demand may explain the 8.5% year-over-year price appreciation — a rate that outpaces many peer counties and signals that Beaver's affordability advantage is slowly being discovered.
What makes Beaver County unique? Beaver County combines some of the most accessible homeownership economics in the mid-Atlantic region with unexpectedly rapid price appreciation, creating a narrow window for buyers before Pittsburgh suburban sprawl fully reprices the market.
Is Beaver County a good place to buy a home right now? For buyers prioritizing value, the price-to-income ratio remains compelling — but the 8.5% annual price growth suggests that window is closing. The combination of aging housing stock, rising prices, and low vacancy (9.1%) means quality inventory moves quickly.
Will the Shell cracker plant help Beaver County's economy? The plant has added jobs and economic activity, particularly in Monaca and Potter Township, but broader wage and poverty data suggest the county is still waiting for the multiplier effects that large industrial anchors typically generate over 10–15 year horizons.
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