Explore accurate parcel and ownership records,
directly sourced from county assessors.
There's a version of this story where Carbon County looks like a working-class bargain in an expensive Northeast corridor — and by some measures, it is. A median home price of $275,000 against a national median of $320,000, rock-bottom rents at $975 a month, and a 77.2% homeownership rate that crushes the national average. On paper, this is the kind of place young families should be flocking to.
But zoom in, and a more complicated picture emerges. The county's 7.1% unemployment rate runs well above the national norm. Nearly 15% of households rely on SNAP benefits. Child poverty hits 17.8% — a full six points above the overall poverty rate — suggesting that the families with the most at stake economically are also the most exposed. This is not simply an affordable haven. It's a community navigating the slow burn of post-industrial transition in the shadow of one of America's most famous resort regions.
Carbon County sits at the southwestern edge of the Pocono Mountains, sharing a border with Monroe County — ground zero for the Pocono resort economy. That proximity is a defining force. The county has long served as the affordable backyard to the resort corridor, attracting second-home buyers, retirees, and Philadelphia and New York transplants priced out of neighboring areas. The 21.0% vacancy rate tells this story loudly: roughly one in five housing units sits empty at any given time, a hallmark of vacation and seasonal markets rather than primary-residence communities.
This dynamic helps explain why year-over-year prices jumped 7.7% even as the local income base remains modest. Demand isn't being driven by local wages — it's being driven by outside capital. The gap between the census-reported median home value ($193,700) and the current transaction-based median price ($275,000) is especially revealing: assessed values haven't caught up with what buyers are actually paying.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Vacancy Rate | 21.0% | 3x the national average — seasonal market fingerprint |
| Homeownership Rate | 77.2% | well above national avg of ~65% |
| YoY Price Change | +7.7% | outpacing income growth significantly |
| Severe Rent Burden | 18.0% | nearly 1 in 5 renters paying >50% of income on housing |
With a median age of 46.3 and 22.1% of residents over 65, Carbon County skews older than most of Pennsylvania. Labor force participation at 60.8% reflects this aging demographic. Just 0.3% of workers use public transit — essentially statistical zero — while 80% drive alone, pointing to a landscape with limited alternatives. For the county's 16.6% of residents living with a disability, this car dependency is a genuine quality-of-life constraint.
The educational attainment picture is notable too: only 12.5% hold a bachelor's degree, compared to roughly 35% nationally, with 44.5% holding only a high school diploma. This shapes both the local labor market and the county's capacity to attract higher-wage employers — a challenge that no amount of scenic mountain backdrop fully offsets.
What makes Carbon County unique? Carbon County occupies a rare position as a genuinely affordable county adjacent to a major resort corridor, creating a dual economy where seasonal and second-home demand coexists with a working-class primary resident base — pushing prices up while local wages stay flat.
Is Carbon County a good place to buy a vacation home? It has been — 7.7% annual price appreciation and a deep rental market driven by Pocono tourism make it attractive. But the 21% vacancy rate also signals that competition among short-term rental properties is intensifying, and buyers should model occupancy carefully before assuming strong returns.
Why is rent burden so high if rents are low? Because local incomes are lower still. At $975 median rent and $67,877 median household income, the math works for homeowners — but for the county's renters, who tend to earn less than owners, that $975 can represent a painful share of take-home pay. Eighteen percent of renters are in severe burden territory, spending more than half their income on housing.
Get instant access to comprehensive county assessors-based property data with your free API key
Need Bulk Data?
Email us at hello@realie.ai