0 Mcabee Road
Chesnee, SC 28139
Spartanburg County
2-08-00-075.04
35.182839, -81.878784
County context
There's a reason BMW chose Spartanburg County over dozens of competing sites when it planted its only U.S. manufacturing plant here in 1994. The Upstate region of South Carolina had something rare: a disciplined industrial workforce, strategic interstate access, and land prices that wouldn't terrify a CFO. Thirty years later, that decision set off a chain reaction — Michelin, Dräxlmaier, and hundreds of suppliers followed — transforming a former textile-mill economy into one of the most export-productive manufacturing corridors in the American South. The housing market is now grappling with that transformation in real time.
At $268,000 median home price against a $64,195 median household income, Spartanburg's price-to-income ratio sits around 4.2x — nearly aligned with the national benchmark of 4x, and a remarkable contrast to the Sun Belt boomtowns it neighbors. Charlotte is over 5x. Greenville County, just 30 miles west and further along in its gentrification arc, has pulled ahead on prices. Spartanburg still offers genuine middle-class affordability, which is precisely why it keeps showing up on "next wave" relocation lists. The $86,000 floor (P10) means entry-level buyers still have a foothold here that's vanished in peer markets.
Yet the -2.9% year-over-year price decline is worth watching. This isn't a crash — it's a cooldown after pandemic-era appreciation ran ahead of local incomes. The wide spread between the $86K floor and a $515K ceiling (P90) reflects a county of genuine contrasts: mill-village bungalows sitting within miles of new executive subdivisions catering to BMW management and transplant professionals.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $268,000 | ~4.2x local income; near national benchmark |
| Homeownership Rate | 72.9% | well above national avg of ~65% |
| Severe Rent Burden | 22.1% | nearly 1 in 4 renters paying >50% of income on housing |
| YoY Price Change | -2.9% | cooling after pandemic run-up |
The homeownership story here is genuinely strong — 72.9% own their homes, well above the national average. But renters are quietly in crisis. A median rent of $1,019 sounds reasonable until you note that 44.5% of renters are cost-burdened and 22.1% are severely so, meaning more than one in five renter households is spending over half their income on housing. This isn't a high-rent problem; it's a low-income problem concentrated in a specific slice of the population, likely service workers and those outside the manufacturing pipeline.
A child poverty rate of 19.3% — nearly one in five kids — sits uncomfortably alongside the gleaming BMW production lines. Only 15.8% of adults hold bachelor's degrees, compared to roughly 35% nationally, and the 12.2% who didn't finish high school face real headwinds in an economy that increasingly requires technical credentials. The county's "some college" cohort at 31% represents a population that started the path but didn't finish — a major workforce development opportunity for Spartanburg's well-regarded technical college system.
What makes Spartanburg County unique? Spartanburg is the rare mid-size Southern county that successfully pivoted from a collapsed textile economy to advanced manufacturing — anchored by BMW's sole U.S. plant — without losing the affordability that originally attracted industry. It's now navigating whether that affordability can survive its own success as neighboring Greenville prices more buyers eastward.
Is Spartanburg County a good place to buy a home right now? The fundamentals remain relatively sound for buyers. The price-to-income ratio is close to the national norm, prices have dipped modestly in the past year, and homeownership rates are high, suggesting stable owner-occupied neighborhoods. The $86K–$515K price range means genuine options exist across income levels — though entry-level inventory is thin and renter displacement pressure suggests affordability won't last indefinitely.
Why is rent burden so high if rents seem low? Median rent of ~$1,019/month appears modest nationally, but Spartanburg's significant share of low-wage service workers and those outside the manufacturing economy earn far less than the median household income. For someone earning $25,000–$35,000 annually, even "affordable" rents consume a punishing share of take-home pay — a dynamic the aggregate median obscures.
Chesnee has 11,428 properties in our comprehensive database.
With an average price of $283,654, Chesnee offers mid-range housing options.
Buyers can expect to pay around $165 per square foot in this market.
Home prices in Chesnee are 13% lower than the Spartanburg County average.
| Metric | Chesnee | Spartanburg County | vs County |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $283,654 | $327,680 | -13% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 1,723 | 1,906 | -10% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $165 | $172 | -4% |
| Properties | 11,428 | 196,559 | -94% |
Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.
The average home price in Chesnee, SC is $283,654, based on analysis of 11,428 properties in our database.
Our database includes 11,428 properties in Chesnee, SC, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Chesnee, SC is $165. This is calculated from an average home price of $283,654 and average size of 1,723 square feet.
Homes in Chesnee, SC average 1,723 square feet, with an average price of $283,654.
Chesnee, SC is one of many cities in Spartanburg County, SC with property data available. Browse other cities in the county to compare market conditions and pricing.
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