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There's a reason Davis County doesn't get as much attention as its neighbors Salt Lake City to the south and Ogden to the north — it has quietly become one of the most economically resilient counties in America. Wedged between the Wasatch Front and the Great Salt Lake, this stretch of communities running through Bountiful, Layton, and Kaysville has built something rare: a high-income, family-oriented suburb with near-full employment and a poverty rate that most counties would envy.
Start with the numbers that matter most. Davis County's $108,058 median household income is 44% above the national median — and it's not a fluke driven by a handful of wealthy enclaves. The poverty rate sits at just 6.0%, and the child poverty rate of 7.3% compares favorably to Utah's already strong statewide figures. With unemployment at 2.5%, this is essentially a full-employment economy, anchored by Hill Air Force Base in Layton, one of the Air Force's largest installations and a dominant employer in aerospace, defense contracting, and logistics that provides insulation from the kinds of economic shocks that rattle more volatile markets.
Davis County is genuinely young and family-dense in ways that reshape how you read the housing data. The median age of 32.3 skews well below national norms, and nearly 31% of residents are under 18 — a figure reflecting both the county's LDS cultural influence and its magnetic pull for young families priced out of Salt Lake County. Average household size of 3.18 is significantly above the national average, which helps explain the dominance of single-family homes: 75.5% of housing units are detached single-family, and homeownership sits at a striking 77.4%.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Value | $470,500 | 1.47x national median, but 4.4x local income |
| Homeownership Rate | 77.4% | well above national avg of ~65% |
| Poverty Rate | 6.0% | roughly half the national rate of ~12.5% |
| Unemployment Rate | 2.5% | near-full employment, well below national norms |
Here's the uncomfortable subplot: despite all this prosperity, renters are quietly under stress. The rent burden sits at 41.5% — meaning the typical renter spends well above the 30% threshold considered healthy — and 16.7% of renters face severe rent burden. Median rent of $1,516 against a county where incomes look robust exposes a bifurcated market: homeowners are building equity in a strong appreciation environment, while renters — many of them younger households still saving for a down payment — are increasingly squeezed.
The 3.3% vacancy rate tells you everything about supply. Davis County is essentially full.
A 16.2% work-from-home rate reflects a knowledge-economy layer that sits alongside the base's defense workforce — software, finance, and healthcare professionals who chose Davis County for its schools and open space and no longer need a Salt Lake commute. That dynamic is likely to keep demand for spacious single-family homes elevated even as mortgage rates remain high.
What makes Davis County unique? The combination of a major military installation (Hill AFB), strong LDS family-formation culture, and proximity to both Salt Lake City employment and Wasatch Mountain recreation creates a demographic profile you won't find many places: high-income, young, family-dense, and extraordinarily stable.
Is Davis County affordable compared to Salt Lake County? Relatively, yes — median home values in Davis County run noticeably below Salt Lake County's most sought-after zip codes — but the price-to-income ratio of roughly 4.4x still exceeds the traditional 4x benchmark, and the rental market is genuinely stressed for lower-income households.
Why is the vacancy rate so low in Davis County? Supply simply hasn't kept pace with demand. The county's geography — bounded by the lake, the mountains, and existing development — limits new construction, and its reputation for good schools and low crime keeps turnover minimal.
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