Property details·Springfield, Delaware County, Pennsylvania·25-00-01003-00
833 Crestview Drive
Springfield, PA 19064
Delaware County
25-00-01003-00
39.943391, -75.367811
| Category | Amount | Year |
|---|---|---|
| Tax value | $7,192.74 | 2026 |
| Market value | $387,350 | 2020 |
| Assessed value | $387,350 | 2026 |
Values reflect public tax roll data as of the year shown.
County context
Delaware County — "Delco" to anyone who's ever lived there — occupies a peculiar sweet spot in the Philadelphia metropolitan constellation. Close enough to Center City to commute, far enough to have its own distinct identity, the county has long been caught between two gravitational pulls: the working-class rowhouse culture of its inner boroughs like Chester and Darby, and the affluent Main Line-adjacent townships like Radnor and Haverford. That tension shows up clearly in the numbers.
At $330,000 median home price, Delco sits modestly below the national median home value of $320,000 — or rather, it does until you notice the average sale price is $454,288, a $124,000 gap that signals something important: a deeply bifurcated market. The county's price range spans from $125,000 entry-level rowhouses in its post-industrial river towns to $875,000-plus colonials in its leafy western townships. Few counties of this density offer that full spectrum under one roof.
Year-over-year appreciation of 9.6% is striking for a county this mature and this dense. This isn't a Sun Belt greenfield market — the median home here was built in 1950, and single-family homes account for fewer than half of all properties. What's driving the surge is partly the ongoing Philadelphia exodus: buyers priced out of the city or its closer suburbs are discovering that Delco offers SEPTA rail access, good school districts, and relative affordability. The pandemic-era remote work shift reinforced this, and the county's 15.4% work-from-home rate reflects that new reality.
Behind the homeownership headline — a healthy 69.6% ownership rate — lies a genuinely troubling rental market. The median rent of $1,315 sounds reasonable, but a rent burden rate of 51.9% and severe rent burden at 27.6% tell a different story. More than half of renters are spending beyond the 30% income threshold considered sustainable. With a child poverty rate of 13.6% running notably higher than the overall poverty rate of 10.2%, the burden falls disproportionately on families who rent. Chester City, one of Pennsylvania's most economically distressed municipalities, sits within these county boundaries and shapes these statistics significantly.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| YoY Price Change | +9.6% | well above Philadelphia metro average |
| Rent Burden Rate | 51.9% | nearly double the 30% healthy threshold |
| Price Spread P10–P90 | $125K–$875K | unusually wide range for a single county |
| Homeownership Rate | 69.6% | above national average of ~65% |
What makes Delaware County, PA unique? Delco is one of the few suburban Philadelphia counties where a $125,000 rowhouse and an $875,000 colonial coexist within miles of each other, served by the same SEPTA rail lines. Its hyper-local identity — "Delco pride" is a genuine cultural phenomenon — combined with direct Philadelphia access creates a market that behaves less like a traditional suburb and more like an extension of the city itself.
Is Delaware County affordable compared to other Philadelphia suburbs? Generally yes, relative to Chester County or Montgomery County. But affordability is increasingly concentrated in older housing stock and specific boroughs, while newer or renovated properties are appreciating quickly. The $219 price-per-square-foot average still undercuts many peer suburbs, though the gap is narrowing fast.
Why is rent burden so high in Delaware County if incomes are above the national median? The county's income average is pulled upward by its wealthier western townships, masking significant pockets of low-income renters in the county's eastern and river-corridor communities. Those renters face tight supply and rising prices without the income base to absorb them.
Our database includes 9,613 properties in Springfield.
With an average price of $483,675, Springfield offers mid-range housing options.
Buyers can expect to pay around $241 per square foot in this market.
Springfield prices closely align with the Delaware County average.
| Metric | Springfield | Delaware County | vs County |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $483,675 | $491,485 | -2% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 2,007 | 2,030 | -1% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $241 | $242 | Same |
| Properties | 9,613 | 223,853 | -96% |
Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.
The average home price in Springfield, PA is $483,675, based on analysis of 9,613 properties in our database.
Our database includes 9,613 properties in Springfield, PA, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Springfield, PA is $241. This is calculated from an average home price of $483,675 and average size of 2,007 square feet.
Homes in Springfield, PA average 2,007 square feet, with an average price of $483,675.
Springfield, PA is one of many cities in Delaware County, PA with property data available. Browse other cities in the county to compare market conditions and pricing.
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