Property details·Harrisonville, Fulton County, Pennsylvania·06-12-003..-000
12586 Pleasant Ridge Road
Harrisonville, PA 17228
Fulton County
06-12-003..-000
40.004151, -78.053672
| Category | Amount | Year |
|---|---|---|
| Tax value | $2,055.42 | 2026 |
| Market value | $41,430 | 1990 |
| Assessed value | $41,430 | 2026 |
| Building value | $7,080 | — |
| Land value | $34,350 | — |
Values reflect public tax roll data as of the year shown.
County context
Tucked into Pennsylvania's south-central ridge-and-valley country, Fulton County is one of the least populous counties in the entire commonwealth — a place where the Tuscarora Mountain defines the skyline and McConnellsburg serves as the only borough in a county the size of a small city. With just 33 people per square mile, this is genuinely rural America. And yet the housing market here is telling a story that shouldn't be ignored: prices are climbing fast, even where few people are looking.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $190,000 | Just 59% of the national median |
| YoY Price Change | +10.7% | Nearly double typical rural PA appreciation |
| Homeownership Rate | 77.6% | Well above the national norm of ~64% |
| Child Poverty Rate | 18.3% | Notably higher than overall poverty rate of 11.7% |
That year-over-year price increase deserves a double-take. Rural counties at Fulton's scale don't typically attract speculative pressure or tech-sector migration. What's likely happening is a combination of forces familiar to remote Appalachian communities since 2020: pandemic-era back-to-the-land buyers from the DC-Baltimore corridor (Fulton County sits roughly 2 hours from both metros), retirees seeking affordable acreage, and a simple lack of inventory. With only 48 sales recorded in the past 12 months across a county of over 14,000 people, even modest demand can move the needle sharply on prices. The entry point remains compelling — the bottom decile of homes starts around $86,000 — but the ceiling is rising.
At a median age of 45.9 and with 22.2% of residents over 65, Fulton County skews significantly older than the national median. The high homeownership rate — 77.6%, more than 13 points above the national average — reflects a population that has put down deep roots. These aren't transient renters; most residents have built equity here over decades. The flip side is a labor force participation rate of just 58.9%, shaped partly by retirement-age residents and a disability rate of 17.3% that hints at the physical toll of agricultural and manufacturing work across generations.
Only 10.6% of adults hold a bachelor's degree — a fraction of the national rate and a structural limiter on wage growth. The 48.3% of residents with a high school diploma as their highest credential reflects an economy built on trades, farming, and light industry rather than professional services. Despite this, the poverty rate sits at a manageable 11.7% overall — but the child poverty rate of 18.3% tells a harder story about intergenerational economic stress.
The $781 median rent is extraordinarily low by any national standard, and rent burden here (25.5%) stays comfortably below the 30% distress threshold — a genuine affordability bright spot.
What makes Fulton County, PA unique? Fulton County is one of Pennsylvania's smallest and most rural counties, offering some of the most affordable housing in the mid-Atlantic region while sitting within driving distance of major East Coast metros. Its combination of high homeownership, low density, and rapidly appreciating prices makes it an outlier worth watching.
Is Fulton County PA a good place to buy a home? For buyers priced out of suburban markets, Fulton County offers real value — homes at roughly 60% of the national median, low rent burden, and strong ownership rates. The 10.7% annual price appreciation suggests the window of maximum affordability may be narrowing.
Why are home prices rising so fast in rural PA counties like Fulton? Thin inventory, remote-work migration from nearby metros like DC and Baltimore, and retiree relocation have all pushed prices upward in small Appalachian counties since 2020. With fewer than 50 sales per year, even small shifts in buyer demand create outsized price movements.
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