Erie County, PA
Property Data

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

Total Properties

130,781

Average Home Price

$224,642

Average Square Feet

1,970

Price per Sq Ft

$143

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

Loading map...
Total Properties
112,728

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

130,781

Median Home Price

$188,000

Average Home Price

$224,642

Average Square Feet

1,970

Price per Sq Ft

$143

Recent Sales (12mo)

1,846

YoY Price Change

16.0%

Sales Velocity

96.6%

Erie County, Pennsylvania: Rust Belt Resilience Meets Surprising Affordability

There's a particular kind of value hiding in Erie County that national real estate narratives tend to overlook. While coastal markets debate whether $800,000 is "entry level" and Sun Belt boomtowns absorb waves of climate migrants, Erie quietly sits on the southern shore of Lake Erie offering median home prices around $185,000 — less than 60% of the national median — while posting an 11.5% year-over-year price gain that would make many overheated markets envious. That combination of affordability and momentum is increasingly rare in post-pandemic America.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$185,10042% below national median of $320,000
YoY Price Change+11.5%well above typical 4–6% national appreciation
Rent Burden Rate46.2%severe, given median rent of only $876/mo
Homeownership Rate68.3%above national average despite 15.4% poverty rate

The Affordability Paradox

Erie's price-to-income ratio sits at roughly 3x — actually better than the national 4x benchmark — which should, in theory, make it one of the more attainable housing markets in the country. And for owners, it largely is: a 68.3% homeownership rate is a genuinely impressive figure for a post-industrial county with a 15.4% poverty rate and nearly 19% of households on SNAP benefits. These numbers don't usually coexist. What explains it? The county's abundant stock of older single-family homes — median build year of 1955, with 68% of units falling into that category — keeps prices accessible for buyers while creating deferred maintenance costs that rarely show up in the headline numbers.

For renters, however, the picture is grimmer. A 46.2% rent burden rate — with one in four renters in severe burden territory — tells a story of income volatility that the low rents don't fully mask. Erie city itself has struggled with concentrated poverty for decades, absorbing the aftermath of manufacturing declines that hollowed out employers like General Electric's locomotive division, once one of the county's largest private employers. The Gini index of 0.460 confirms what those rent burden numbers suggest: this is a county of stark economic contrasts.

Signs of a Market in Transition

The 11.5% price appreciation isn't happening in a vacuum. Erie has seen renewed investment interest tied to its Opportunity Zone designations, waterfront redevelopment efforts around Presque Isle, and a slow but real in-migration of remote workers priced out of Pittsburgh and Cleveland. With broadband access at 87.5% and 8.2% of residents already working from home, the infrastructure for that shift exists. The $68,000–$410,000 price range from P10 to P90 also signals a market with genuine depth — entry points for investors and move-up options for established families alike.

The median age of 40.1 and a 19.2% share of residents over 65 suggest a county confronting succession economics: older homeowners aging in place in paid-off houses, with the question of what happens to that housing stock over the next decade becoming increasingly central to Erie's future.


FAQs

What makes Erie County, PA unique in the real estate market? Erie County offers one of the few remaining combinations in the Northeast of sub-$200K median home prices, above-average homeownership rates, and double-digit annual appreciation — making it an outlier in a region where affordability has largely collapsed. Its Great Lakes location, legacy industrial housing stock, and Opportunity Zone investment have created unusual market dynamics.

Is Erie, PA a good place to buy a home right now? For buyers, Erie County's price-to-income ratio of roughly 3x compares favorably to the national benchmark of 4x, and recent appreciation suggests equity gains are realistic. The catch is housing age — with a median build year of 1955, inspection and renovation costs deserve serious attention. For investors, the gap between a P10 price of $68,000 and median rents of $876 creates meaningful yield potential, though tenant income instability is a real risk factor.

Why is Erie's rent burden so high if rents are low? This is the central tension in Erie's market. Median rent of $876/month sounds manageable nationally, but against median household incomes that skew significantly lower in renter-occupied households — often held down by part-time work, disability, and service-sector wages — even modest rents consume an outsized share of income. It's a reminder that affordability is always relative to what people actually earn, not to what housing costs elsewhere.

More Counties in Pennsylvania

Access Erie County, PA 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