Property details·Centre Hall, Centre County, Pennsylvania·21-003-,016B,0000-
108 Ridge Road
Centre Hall, PA 16828
Centre County
21-003-,016B,0000-
40.874987, -77.633710
County context
Centre County sits at the geographic and psychological center of Pennsylvania, anchored entirely by Penn State University in a way few American counties are defined by a single institution. The university doesn't just employ people here — it is the economy, the demographic profile, the rental market, and the reason this otherwise rural mountain county punches far above its weight in educational attainment and housing demand.
That context is essential to reading the data correctly. A median age of 33.8 — notably younger than Pennsylvania's statewide figure of roughly 41 — isn't a sign of organic population growth. It's the annual replenishment of roughly 45,000 undergraduates cycling through State College. Similarly, the 36.8% school enrollment rate (nearly double the national norm) and a graduate degree attainment of 24.1% reflect a county where advanced credentials are the baseline, not the exception.
On the surface, Centre County looks affordable. A median home price of $345,000 sits just above the national median, and at roughly 4.7x median household income, it's tighter than the national benchmark but hardly alarming by Pennsylvania standards. Yet beneath that surface is a deeply bifurcated market.
The spread between the 10th percentile home price ($129,200) and the 90th ($625,000) tells a story of two separate housing economies coexisting in the same county. Year-over-year price appreciation of 6.1% — outpacing most of central Pennsylvania — suggests demand is not cooling. The average sale price of $387,254 running well above the median indicates that high-end transactions are pulling the market upward.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $345,000 | ~4.7x median household income |
| YoY Price Change | +6.1% | outpaces Pennsylvania's statewide average |
| Severe Rent Burden | 33.1% | 1 in 3 renters paying >50% of income on rent |
| Graduate Degree Rate | 24.1% | among the highest of any non-metro county in the U.S. |
Here is the genuinely alarming figure in this dataset: 33.1% of renters in Centre County face severe rent burden, meaning they're spending more than half their income on housing. That's not a rounding error — it's a structural crisis baked into a market where landlords near Penn State command premium rents from students (or their parents) regardless of local wage realities. A median rent of $1,181 might sound manageable in isolation, but for graduate students, service workers, and university staff earning well below the county's income average, it's crushing. The overall rent burden rate of 52.4% — meaning the average rent-burdened household — is extraordinary even by college-town standards.
The poverty rate of 16.9% — elevated against the national rate of roughly 12.5% — is another Penn State artifact. Student poverty inflates that number substantially, which is why the child poverty rate of just 9.1% paints a far more benign picture of actual family economic stress. The county's 13.6% work-from-home rate reflects the professional and administrative class that has settled in the broader region, often trading urban salaries for Centre County's quality of life and relatively accessible homeownership.
What makes Centre County, Pennsylvania unique? Centre County is one of the most educationally credentialed non-metropolitan counties in the United States, almost entirely because of Penn State University. This creates a rare combination: rural geography, college-town housing economics, high intellectual capital, and a transient population that fundamentally shapes every demographic and market metric in the county.
Is State College a good place to buy a home as an investor? The consistent demand from a university community — students, faculty, and staff — creates a durable rental market, and 6.1% annual appreciation suggests long-term value growth. However, severe rent burden rates indicate the market may be approaching affordability limits for local renters, and the tight spread between renter demand and wage growth bears watching for anyone underwriting multi-year cash flow assumptions.
Why is the poverty rate so high in Centre County if the economy seems stable? Student poverty is the primary driver. College students frequently report low or zero income, which statistically elevates county-level poverty rates. The far lower child poverty rate (9.1%) suggests that families and long-term residents are in meaningfully better economic shape than the headline poverty figure implies.
Our database includes 1,870 properties in Centre Hall.
With an average price of $422,631, Centre Hall offers mid-range housing options.
Buyers can expect to pay around $244 per square foot in this market.
Centre Hall prices closely align with the Centre County average.
| Metric | Centre Hall | Centre County | vs County |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $422,631 | $406,030 | +4% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 1,735 | 1,731 | Same |
| Price/Sq Ft | $244 | $235 | +4% |
| Properties | 1,870 | 70,960 | -97% |
Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.
The average home price in Centre Hall, PA is $422,631, based on analysis of 1,870 properties in our database.
Our database includes 1,870 properties in Centre Hall, PA, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Centre Hall, PA is $244. This is calculated from an average home price of $422,631 and average size of 1,735 square feet.
Homes in Centre Hall, PA average 1,735 square feet, with an average price of $422,631.
Centre Hall, PA is one of many cities in Centre County, PA with property data available. Browse other cities in the county to compare market conditions and pricing.
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