Richland County, SC
Property Data

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

Total Properties

204,429

Average Home Price

$307,574

Average Square Feet

2,212

Price per Sq Ft

$149

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
421,671

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

204,429

Median Home Price

$250,000

Average Home Price

$307,574

Average Square Feet

2,212

Price per Sq Ft

$149

Recent Sales (12mo)

3,898

YoY Price Change

3.7%

Sales Velocity

60.8%

Richland County, South Carolina: A Capital County at a Crossroads

Columbia's home county sits at a peculiar intersection of prosperity and precarity. Richland County hosts the state capital, the flagship University of South Carolina campus, Fort Jackson — the largest Army basic training installation in the United States — and a sprawling suburban landscape that stretches into the Midlands. Yet beneath that institutional weight lies a housing market and income profile that tells a more complicated story than the county's resume might suggest.

A Market Cooling After Pandemic-Era Heat

The most immediate story in Richland County's data is a modest price correction: home values are down 1.6% year-over-year, a notable shift after the surge that reshaped South Carolina's housing market between 2020 and 2023. Columbia attracted significant in-migration during the remote work era — drawn by relative affordability compared to Charlotte, Atlanta, and Raleigh — and that tide appears to be receding. At a median sale price of $254,900 and $148 per square foot, Richland County remains one of the more accessible urban counties in the Southeast. But "affordable" is doing a lot of heavy lifting here.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$254,900Well below national median of $320,000
Rent Burden Rate53.1%Nearly double the 30% healthy threshold
Child Poverty Rate22.0%Exceeds the already-elevated overall rate of 16.9%
Gini Index0.489Among the higher inequality readings in the Southeast

When "Affordable" Isn't Actually Affordable

Here's the paradox: homes are cheap by national standards, yet over half of Richland County renters are spending more than 30% of their income on housing — and nearly 30% face severe rent burden. With a median household income of $61,699 (roughly 18% below the national benchmark), the math doesn't work for a substantial portion of the population. The $1,185 median rent may look modest on paper, but against local wages it represents a genuine crisis for working households.

The Gini coefficient of 0.489 is a striking signal. It reflects a county sharply divided between the professional class — government employees, university faculty, medical professionals at Prisma Health — and a large service-sector and transient population anchored by Fort Jackson's constant rotation of recruits and support workers. That military churn also partly explains the younger-than-average median age of 34.2 and the comparatively modest homeownership rate for a county of this size.

Education Without Earnings

Richland County is more educated than it is wealthy. Over 41% of residents hold a bachelor's degree or higher — a figure that reflects USC's gravitational pull and Columbia's government employment base. Yet per capita income sits at $37,190, suggesting that educational attainment here hasn't translated into the wage premiums seen in peer metros. Many college graduates leave for larger markets; those who stay often enter lower-wage public-sector or nonprofit roles.


FAQs

What makes Richland County unique? Few U.S. counties combine a state capital, a major public research university, and the country's busiest Army training base in a single geography. That trifecta creates unusual housing dynamics: high institutional stability, significant transient population, and a persistent gap between credential levels and income outcomes.

Is Richland County a good place to buy a home right now? The 1.6% price dip and relative affordability make entry-point buying attractive compared to regional peers. However, the wide gap between the 10th percentile ($99,895) and 90th percentile ($575,000) means neighborhood selection matters enormously — the county's housing market is highly fragmented by location and condition.

Why is rent burden so high if rents seem low? Because local wages lag national norms significantly. A rent that looks affordable to someone relocating from Northern Virginia or Miami can consume 40–50% of a Columbia-area service worker's income. It's a regional wage problem, not just a housing supply problem.

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