Amelia County, VA
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Total Properties

13,187

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Total Properties
2,09610,253

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

13,187

Median Home Price

Average Home Price

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Price per Sq Ft

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Amelia County, Virginia: Rural Affordability with Hidden Pressures

About an hour southwest of Richmond along Route 360, Amelia County sits in the kind of quiet, wooded Piedmont landscape that Virginians picture when they imagine escaping the suburbs. With fewer than 14,000 residents spread across 356 square miles — a density of just 38 people per square mile — this is unambiguously rural Virginia. Yet the data here tells a more nuanced story than simple pastoral simplicity. Amelia has real affordability advantages, a striking ownership culture, and some structural vulnerabilities that deserve a closer look.

A Buyer's Market in a Sea of Expensive Virginia

At $239,700, Amelia's median home value is roughly 25% below the national benchmark of $320,000 — remarkable given its proximity to the Richmond metro. For buyers priced out of Chesterfield or Powhatan counties, Amelia has long served as a pressure valve: bigger lots, lower prices, and a genuine small-town character centered around its historic courthouse village. The price-to-income ratio sits at a relatively healthy 3.6x, actually below the national 4x benchmark, which is genuinely unusual for any county within commuting distance of a state capital.

That affordability has translated into one of the highest homeownership rates you'll find anywhere: 81.2%, compared to the national average hovering around 65%. Nearly 79% of housing units are single-family homes. Amelia isn't a rental market — it's a community of landowners, and that identity runs deep.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Value$239,70025% below national average
Homeownership Rate81.2%well above national avg ~65%
Price-to-Income Ratio3.6xbelow the 4x national benchmark
Rent Burden Rate41.8%far exceeds 30% threshold

The Renter Paradox

Here's the tension: for the roughly 18.8% of households who do rent, life is considerably harder. A rent burden rate of 41.8% — meaning the average renter spends well over 30% of income on housing — points to a thin and uncompetitive rental market. When rentals are scarce in a county this size, landlords face little pressure to keep prices modest. Seventeen percent of renters are severely cost-burdened. For lower-income families, single parents, or young workers not yet ready to buy, Amelia's housing market offers few comfortable options.

Education, Employment, and the Aging Curve

The workforce picture reflects broader rural Virginia trends. Labor force participation at 59.2% is low, partly explained by a population that skews older — the median age is 44.8, and over 20% of residents are 65 or older. Only 12.9% hold a bachelor's degree, compared to roughly 34% nationally, and nearly 44% of adults stopped at a high school diploma. The 5.3% unemployment rate is elevated relative to Virginia's typically tight labor market.

With 16.2% of households lacking internet access and remote work adoption at just 9.4%, Amelia has not yet fully plugged into the post-pandemic telework economy that revitalized many rural counties closer to major metros.


What makes Amelia County unique? Amelia County is one of the few rural Virginia counties where median home prices remain below the national average while sitting within reasonable commuting distance of Richmond — creating genuine affordability that has sustained an 81% homeownership rate rarely seen outside the rural South.

Is Amelia County good for first-time homebuyers? On price alone, yes — the price-to-income ratio is actually favorable by national standards. But buyers should factor in limited broadband coverage, a thin job market, and the near-total dependence on personal vehicles (81.5% drive alone to work) before committing.

Why are renters struggling in Amelia County if home prices are affordable? Because rental inventory is extremely limited in small rural counties, landlords face little competition, keeping rents disproportionately high relative to local incomes. The county's ownership culture means rentals were never built at scale — leaving the minority who rent in a structurally weak position.

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