Property details·Middlebrook, Augusta County, Virginia·072 5B
917 Cales Springs Road
Middlebrook, VA 24459
Augusta County
072 5B
38.072898, -79.251178
| Category | Amount | Year |
|---|---|---|
| Tax value | $279.24 | 2026 |
| Market value | $108,900 | 2024 |
| Assessed value | $108,900 | 2026 |
| Land value | $108,900 | — |
Values reflect public tax roll data as of the year shown.
County context
There's a particular kind of real estate market that doesn't make national headlines — no bidding wars, no viral listings, no tech-fueled price spikes — but quietly delivers something increasingly rare: stability. Augusta County, Virginia, wrapped around the city of Staunton in the heart of the Shenandoah Valley, is exactly that kind of place. And right now, its housing market is telling a nuanced story worth understanding.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $322,750 | well below national median of $320K — essentially at parity |
| Homeownership Rate | 78.9% | dramatically above national avg of ~65% |
| Price-to-Income Ratio | 4.0x | precisely at the national benchmark — a rare affordability sweet spot |
| YoY Price Change | -2.9% | modest correction after pandemic-era run-up |
Augusta County sits in an almost uncanny position: its price-to-income ratio lands almost exactly at the 4x national benchmark that economists consider the threshold of healthy affordability. With a median household income of nearly $80,000 — above the national figure — and home prices still below $325,000 at the median, the county offers genuine ownership access. The 78.9% homeownership rate isn't an accident; it reflects a community where buying has long made more financial sense than renting.
That renter experience, however, tells a more complicated story. The median rent of $1,057 sounds modest, but 38.3% of renters are cost-burdened — above the 30% threshold — and nearly 1 in 5 renters faces severe burden. In a county where renting is the minority option, this concentrated financial stress among the 21% who do rent deserves attention.
The -2.9% year-over-year price decline isn't cause for alarm — it's correction. The Shenandoah Valley, like much of rural and semi-rural Virginia, saw pandemic-era demand surge as remote workers from Northern Virginia and the D.C. metro area discovered that a two-hour drive could get them a 2,100-square-foot home on acreage for a fraction of what they'd pay in Fairfax County. That wave has receded with return-to-office pressures and rising mortgage rates. What remains is a market finding its natural floor.
Augusta County's median age of 44.9 years — and the fact that 22% of residents are 65 or older — signals a deeply rooted population. This isn't a transient county. The low vacancy rate of 6.8%, the 80% single-family home stock, and the near-total absence of public transit use (0.2%) paint a picture of car-dependent, land-owning households who have lived here for decades. The relatively modest 15.6% bachelor's degree attainment, while below Virginia's famously educated averages, is consistent with a county built around agriculture, manufacturing, and trades rather than university employment.
The disability rate of 15.2% — notably above national norms — and a veterans population of 7.7% point to communities with deep working-class and military roots, communities that value homeownership not as investment strategy but as foundation.
What makes Augusta County, Virginia unique in the real estate market? Augusta County occupies a genuine affordability sweet spot — a price-to-income ratio at exactly the national benchmark — in a state where much of the housing market has become inaccessible. Its high homeownership rate (nearly 79%) and large single-family housing stock make it one of the most ownership-accessible counties in the mid-Atlantic region, while its Shenandoah Valley setting continues to attract remote workers priced out of Northern Virginia.
Is Augusta County, Virginia a good place to buy a home right now? The modest -2.9% price decline suggests a cooling from pandemic peaks, which buyers may find opportunistic. With prices still at parity with national medians but incomes above the national average, the fundamental affordability case remains strong. Entry-level buyers can find homes below $155,000 at the 10th percentile — a rarity in modern Virginia real estate.
Why are renters struggling in an otherwise affordable county? Augusta County's rental market is small and undersupplied relative to demand. With only about 21% of households renting and limited multifamily construction in a predominantly single-family county, renters compete for a thin inventory — pushing burden rates above the healthy threshold despite ostensibly modest headline rents.
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