Dekalb County, TN
Property Data

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

Total Properties

22,807

Average Home Price

$276,444

Average Square Feet

1,717

Price per Sq Ft

$200

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
76515,714

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

22,807

Median Home Price

$245,000

Average Home Price

$276,444

Average Square Feet

1,717

Price per Sq Ft

$200

Recent Sales (12mo)

418

YoY Price Change

1.5%

Sales Velocity

83.3%

DeKalb County, Tennessee: Affordable Housing Meets a Surprisingly Stressed Renter Class

DeKalb County sits in the upper Cumberland Plateau region of Middle Tennessee, anchored by the small city of Smithville and centered on Center Hill Lake — one of the Army Corps of Engineers' most popular reservoirs in the state. That lake is no small detail. It shapes the local economy, drives seasonal tourism, inflates the top of the housing market, and helps explain why a county with a median household income barely above $48,000 is seeing homes trade hands at prices that stretch many residents thin.

A Tale of Two Markets

On the surface, DeKalb looks affordable. At $250,000, the median home price sits well below national norms, and the price-to-income ratio of roughly 5.2x is below the frothy double-digits seen in Nashville suburbs. But zoom out and the picture complicates quickly. The gap between the 10th percentile sale price ($45,000) and the 90th ($580,000) is enormous for a county this size — a spread that reflects both deteriorating rural stock and lake-adjacent vacation properties pulling the top end skyward. The average sale price of $291,260 running well above the median tells the same story: a handful of premium lakefront transactions are distorting what is otherwise a modest rural market.

For the 31% of households who rent, affordability is not an abstraction. A median rent of just $773 sounds reasonable until you set it against local incomes — nearly half of renters (48%) are rent-burdened, and nearly one in five (19.7%) are severely so. In a county where 14.7% of households receive SNAP benefits and the child poverty rate reaches 30.7%, those rent numbers carry real weight.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$250,000~5.2x median household income
Rent Burden Rate48.0%well above 30% threshold
Child Poverty Rate30.7%nearly 1 in 3 children
Vacancy Rate15.3%suggests seasonal/vacation housing stock

The Labor Participation Puzzle

One of the most striking numbers in the dataset is the labor force participation rate of just 54.3% — roughly 10 points below the national average. DeKalb's disability rate of 21.6% (affecting more than one in five residents) and a senior population of 18.8% both contribute, but the figure also reflects a broader rural Tennessee pattern of workforce detachment. Unemployment at 6.0% counts only those actively seeking work; the full picture of economic inactivity here is considerably larger.

The education profile reinforces this: only 12.9% hold a bachelor's degree and 17.3% have less than a high school diploma, limiting access to higher-wage remote or professional work. The county's 6.5% work-from-home rate and incomplete broadband penetration (16.9% of households still have no internet) mean that the remote-work wave that lifted many small towns post-2020 has arrived here only partially.

What Makes DeKalb County Unique?

Center Hill Lake's dual identity sets DeKalb apart from most rural Tennessee counties of similar size. The lake draws retirees, second-home buyers, and weekend tourists, creating a property market with structural inequality baked in — modest working-class housing cheek-by-jowl with six-figure lakefront retreats. It generates sales volume and tax base, but also price pressure that local wages can't easily absorb.


Is DeKalb County, Tennessee a good place to buy a home? For buyers with stable income or equity from another market, yes — prices remain moderate by national standards and appreciation is steady at 3.5% year-over-year. But first-time buyers earning local wages face a tighter squeeze than the headline numbers suggest, particularly given the limited rental alternatives and high rent burden already in the market.

Why is the vacancy rate so high in DeKalb County? The 15.3% vacancy rate is almost certainly a reflection of seasonal housing — cabins, lake cottages, and second homes around Center Hill Lake that sit empty much of the year. This is common in resort-adjacent rural counties and doesn't signal market distress so much as a housing stock that serves two distinct populations simultaneously.

Market Overview

Dekalb County has 22,807 properties in our comprehensive database.

With an average price of $276,444, Dekalb County offers mid-range housing options.

Buyers can expect to pay around $161 per square foot in this market.

Frequently Asked Questions About Dekalb County, TN Real Estate

What is the average home price in Dekalb County, TN?

The average home price in Dekalb County, TN is $276,444, based on analysis of 22,807 properties in our database.

How many properties are tracked in Dekalb County, TN?

Our database includes 22,807 properties in Dekalb County, TN, providing comprehensive market coverage.

What is the price per square foot in Dekalb County, TN?

The average price per square foot in Dekalb County, TN is $161. This is calculated from an average home price of $276,444 and average size of 1,717 square feet.

What is the average home size in Dekalb County, TN?

Homes in Dekalb County, TN average 1,717 square feet, with an average price of $276,444.

How does Dekalb County, TN compare to other Tennessee counties?

Dekalb County, TN is one of 95 counties in Tennessee with property data available. Browse other counties to compare market conditions and pricing.

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