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There's a persistent image of Alexandria, Virginia as a city of Federal Hill townhouses, cobblestone streets in Old Town, and government contractors earning comfortable six-figure salaries. The data confirms half of that picture — and complicates the rest considerably.
With a median household income of $113,638 (more than 50% above the national median) and a per capita income approaching $78,000, Alexandria is unambiguously prosperous. Its 3.4% unemployment rate, 75.7% labor force participation, and the remarkable fact that nearly two-thirds of residents hold a bachelor's degree or higher all point to a highly educated, economically active population anchored in the D.C. federal ecosystem. The proximity to the Pentagon, Amazon's HQ2 in nearby National Landing, and the dense web of defense contractors and lobbying firms along the I-395 corridor explains much of this story.
But here's what surprises most people about Alexandria: 42% of residents own their homes. In a city that projects affluence, nearly six in ten households rent — a rate more typical of a dense urban core like Chicago or Philadelphia than a prosperous independent Virginia city. That's not a fluke. It reflects a housing stock that is only 14% single-family, a median year-built of 1970, and a price-to-income ratio that effectively locks out many would-be buyers even on solid incomes.
The median rent of $2,031 sounds steep. The reality is worse. A full 44.4% of Alexandria renters are rent-burdened — paying more than 30% of income on housing — and 20.6% face severe rent burden, defined as spending over half their income on rent. In a city where the average income looks comfortable on paper, this exposes the Gini coefficient of 0.464: Alexandria has a level of income inequality comparable to many major metros, with a significant lower-income population living in the shadow of the federal wealth machine.
That 12.8% child poverty rate — notably higher than the overall 8.4% poverty rate — tells a similar story. The households struggling most are disproportionately those with children.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $730,000 | 6.4x national median home value |
| YoY Price Change | +13.5% | nearly double typical D.C. suburb appreciation |
| Rent Burden Rate | 44.4% | far above the 30% threshold considered healthy |
| Homeownership Rate | 42.0% | strikingly low for a city with $113K median income |
That 13.5% year-over-year price increase is not accidental. Amazon's HQ2 buildout in neighboring Arlington has created a gravitational pull across the entire inner Northern Virginia corridor. Alexandria — already tight on inventory at under 2,000 total properties tracked with recent sales — is feeling demand that its supply simply cannot absorb. The gap between the median price ($730,000) and the 90th percentile ($1.46M) suggests a stratified market where entry-level condos and luxury renovated rowhouses coexist but are diverging rapidly.
What makes Alexandria, Virginia unique in the D.C. housing market? Alexandria sits at the intersection of Old Town historic charm and new-economy demand, with Amazon's HQ2 driving appreciation across the region. Its unusually low homeownership rate for an affluent city, combined with severe rent burden among lower-income households, makes it one of the more economically polarized communities in the D.C. suburbs.
Is Alexandria, VA affordable for renters? Not comfortably. With median rent at $2,031 and nearly one in five renters spending more than half their income on housing, Alexandria poses serious affordability challenges despite its high average incomes — a gap explained by significant inequality within the city's population.
Why is Alexandria's homeownership rate so low? A combination of high prices (median $730,000), a predominantly multifamily housing stock (only 14% single-family homes), and a transient federal/contractor workforce that tends to rent short-term all contribute to one of the lowest homeownership rates among Virginia's wealthier jurisdictions.
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