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There's a reason Anderson County, Tennessee doesn't behave like a typical small Southern county. Tucked into the ridge-and-valley terrain of East Tennessee, this is the home of Oak Ridge — a city literally built in secrecy during World War II to enrich uranium for the Manhattan Project. The federal government's fingerprints are still all over this economy, seven decades later, and they explain a lot of what's surprising in the data.
The county's median home value of $285,000 sits comfortably below the national benchmark of $320,000, and at roughly 4.5x the median household income of $63,171, affordability here is tighter than the raw numbers suggest but still far healthier than major metro markets. What's more telling is the spread: the cheapest 10% of homes sell around $85,000 while the top 10% reach $535,500 — a wide range that reflects a county serving everyone from retirees on fixed incomes to nuclear engineers and federal contractors earning well above local averages.
The -4.4% year-over-year price decline stands out. Anderson County isn't a distressed market — vacancy sits at a modest 9.8% and homeownership at a robust 71%, well above the national norm. The more likely explanation is a natural correction after the post-pandemic surge that drove up rural and exurban Tennessee markets dramatically. Knoxville, just 25 miles down I-40, has been one of the Southeast's hottest metros, and Anderson County absorbed significant spillover demand between 2020 and 2023. That froth is now cooling, which may actually represent an opportunity for buyers priced out of Knox County.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $285,000 | Below national median of $320,000 |
| YoY Price Change | -4.4% | Post-pandemic correction underway |
| Homeownership Rate | 71.0% | Well above national avg of ~65% |
| Rent Burden Rate | 38.7% | Exceeds the 30% threshold; renters feel the squeeze |
For a county where nearly three-quarters of households own their homes, the rental picture is surprisingly strained. At $960 median rent, renters are paying 38.7% of their income on housing — above the 30% burden threshold — and more than 20% face severe rent burden. This isn't unusual in smaller Tennessee markets where rental stock is limited, older, and hasn't kept pace with demand from the younger and lower-income residents who can't yet access homeownership.
The aging housing stock (median year built: 1972) and a disability rate of 20.1% — notably elevated — point to a community that carries the health legacy of decades of industrial and nuclear work in its population.
With a median age of 42 and 20% of residents over 65, Anderson County skews older than Tennessee as a whole. Labor force participation of just 56.6% partly reflects that demographic reality. The 15.2% bachelor's degree attainment is lower than national averages, but the 11.1% graduate degree rate hints at the professional class tied to Oak Ridge National Laboratory and Y-12 National Security Complex — institutions that continue to draw PhDs and specialists to a county that otherwise resembles rural Appalachia.
What makes Anderson County unique? Anderson County is home to Oak Ridge, one of America's most historically significant cities — built virtually overnight in 1942 as part of the Manhattan Project. The continued presence of major federal research and defense installations creates an unusual economic floor that insulates the county from some of the volatility seen in peer Appalachian markets.
Is Anderson County a good place to buy a home right now? With prices down 4.4% year-over-year and still sitting below the national median, buyers have more negotiating room than they've had in years. Strong homeownership rates and low vehicle-free households suggest stable, committed residents — generally a sign of community durability.
Why is the rent burden so high if home prices are relatively affordable? Anderson County has a thin and aging rental market. When rental supply is limited and skews toward older stock, even modest rents can consume a disproportionate share of income for lower-wage renters — a dynamic common across small Tennessee counties where single-family ownership dominates and apartment development has lagged.
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