Property details·Bloomsburg, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania·03-S3S1-001-019
1604 Rock Glen Road
Bloomsburg, PA 17815
Luzerne County
03-S3S1-001-019
40.980822, -76.213370
| Category | Amount | Year |
|---|---|---|
| Tax value | $1,371.53 | 2026 |
| Market value | $70,400 | 2009 |
| Assessed value | $70,400 | 2026 |
| Building value | $54,500 | — |
| Land value | $15,900 | — |
Values reflect public tax roll data as of the year shown.
County context
There's a version of the American housing story where $185,000 buys you a single-family home in a county of 325,000 people, an hour from the Poconos and two hours from Philadelphia. That version exists in Luzerne County — and it's attracting serious attention. But the data beneath those headline prices tells a more complicated story about a post-industrial community navigating a difficult economic transition.
Luzerne County sits in the Wyoming Valley of northeastern Pennsylvania, built on anthracite coal wealth that peaked over a century ago. Cities like Wilkes-Barre and Hazleton carry that industrial legacy in their housing stock — the median year built is 1970, but walk through many neighborhoods and you'll find row homes and duplexes from the 1920s. What the region also carries is affordability that looks almost impossible by contemporary American standards.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $185,000 | 42% below the national median of $320,000 |
| Price Per Sq Ft | $127 | Among the lowest in Pennsylvania |
| YoY Price Change | +12.0% | Well above typical appreciation; demand is accelerating |
| Rent Burden Rate | 41.3% | Dangerously above the 30% healthy threshold |
Here's what makes Luzerne County genuinely surprising: homes are cheap by any national measure, yet renters are being squeezed hard. Nearly a quarter of renter households — 23.2% — are severely rent burdened, spending more than half their income on housing. With a median rent of just $958, the problem isn't the rent itself. It's that household incomes for renters are simply too low to absorb even modest costs. The 15.4% poverty rate and a child poverty rate of 24.5% point to an economy where wage growth has not kept pace even with these humble price points.
The 12% year-over-year price appreciation is a new dynamic for a county that spent decades watching values stagnate. Remote work migration from New York and New Jersey — just 90 minutes from the George Washington Bridge — has found Luzerne County. Hazleton in particular has attracted significant new population. That demand is pushing prices upward fast, and first-time buyers competing with out-of-market cash buyers are feeling it.
A 67.8% homeownership rate is quietly impressive — it beats the national average — but it reflects decades-old ownership patterns more than current mobility. The 11.6% vacancy rate signals an oversupply of older, sometimes distressed stock that the market hasn't absorbed. The spread between the 10th percentile home price ($60,000) and the 90th ($389,900) is enormous, capturing everything from derelict row homes in Wilkes-Barre's struggling neighborhoods to newer construction in suburban townships.
Labor force participation at 60.7% and a 16% disability rate speak to the lasting health consequences of industrial work — a dimension of inequality rarely captured in housing metrics alone. With just 15.3% of adults holding a bachelor's degree, the professional workforce that typically drives sustained housing appreciation is thin on the ground locally.
Luzerne County is a bargain, but it's a bargain with history. The 12% price surge suggests the outside world is discovering it. Whether that brings genuine revitalization or simply prices out the people who stayed through the hard decades is the central question this community now faces.
What makes Luzerne County unique in Pennsylvania's real estate market? Luzerne County offers some of the lowest per-square-foot home prices in the state — around $127/sqft — in a location with genuine commuter access to major metro areas. That combination, rare in the Northeast, is driving an unusual migration-fueled appreciation surge in a county that historically saw flat or declining values.
Is Luzerne County a good place to invest in real estate right now? The 12% year-over-year price growth and high homeownership stability are attractive signals. However, a high vacancy rate (11.6%), aging housing stock with a median build year of 1970, and significant local poverty create real risks for investors expecting quick value appreciation or strong rental demand across the board. Location within the county matters enormously.
Why is rent burden so high if rents in Luzerne County are low? Median rent of $958 sounds affordable nationally, but local renter incomes are well below national averages. When a large share of residents earn poverty-level wages, even modest rents consume a disproportionate share of take-home pay — a reminder that affordability is always relative to local earnings, not national benchmarks.
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