110 Elmtree Lane
Galax, VA 24333
Grayson County
41A-1-9
36.673570, -80.945258
County context
Grayson County sits at the southwestern tip of Virginia, where the New River Highlands give way to Mount Rogers — the highest peak in the state — and the landscape is genuinely spectacular. The problem is that scenery doesn't pay bills. This is a county where the housing is remarkably cheap by any national standard, yet a significant share of residents are still stretched thin. That paradox is the defining tension of Grayson County's real estate story.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $185,000 | 42% below national median home value |
| Homeownership Rate | 81.9% | well above national average of ~65% |
| Rent Burden Rate | 41.5% | far above the 30% threshold considered healthy |
| Vacancy Rate | 30.8% | more than double the national average of ~13% |
At $185,000, the median home in Grayson County costs less than the down payment on a house in Northern Virginia. And with a price-to-income ratio of roughly 4.3x — close to the national benchmark — homeownership is genuinely attainable here in a way it simply isn't in most of America right now. The 81.9% homeownership rate reflects that reality: in Appalachian communities like this one, land has been held in families for generations, and ownership is cultural as much as financial.
But the 18% of residents who rent tell a starkly different story. A median rent of $712 sounds low in absolute terms, yet against a median household income of $42,864 — barely 57 cents on the national dollar — it produces a rent burden rate of 41.5%, with nearly one in five renters in severe burden territory. These are people for whom the affordability narrative of rural Virginia simply doesn't apply.
The median age of 48.5 is a quiet alarm bell. Only 16.5% of residents are under 18, while more than a quarter are 65 or older. The labor force participation rate of 47.3% — versus roughly 63% nationally — is less a sign of laziness than arithmetic: when more than a quarter of your population is retirement age and another fifth carries a disability, the working-age base shrinks fast. The 24.1% child poverty rate suggests that the families who are young and here are often struggling.
The 30.8% vacancy rate tells the migration story plainly. There are nearly 9,000 housing units in a county of 15,000 people. Some of those empty homes are weekend retreats for people drawn by the Appalachian Trail and Grayson Highlands State Park — a growing but still modest recreational tourism economy. Others are simply abandoned, left behind as younger generations moved toward Galax, Roanoke, or further still.
Year-over-year prices are up 4.3%, suggesting outside interest is real and growing. But with only 133 sales in the past 12 months and a wide price spread — from $67,200 at the 10th percentile to $585,000 at the 90th — this is a bifurcated market: modest working homesteads on one end, premium mountain properties on the other.
What makes Grayson County, Virginia unique? Grayson County is home to Mount Rogers, Virginia's highest peak, and Grayson Highlands State Park — one of the most distinctive landscapes in the eastern United States, famous for its wild ponies and high-altitude meadows. This natural asset is increasingly drawing remote workers and recreational buyers, creating a slow but real upward pressure on property values in a county that has otherwise faced decades of economic contraction.
Is Grayson County, Virginia affordable to live in? For buyers, yes — remarkably so. A median home price of $185,000 and an ownership rate above 80% make it one of the more accessible housing markets in the mid-Atlantic region. For renters, however, affordability is a serious problem: low incomes relative to even modest rents push many households into financial stress, and limited public transit or transit infrastructure means a car is essentially mandatory for daily life.
Is remote work changing the Grayson County real estate market? Slowly. Only 5.2% of residents currently work from home, and 18.5% lack internet access entirely — a significant barrier in an era when broadband is as essential as electricity. Targeted rural broadband expansion could be transformative here, potentially attracting the remote-working buyers who have already reshaped markets in similar Appalachian counties like Floyd or Giles.
Our database includes 4,259 properties in Galax.
With an average price of $262,235, Galax offers mid-range housing options.
Buyers can expect to pay around $175 per square foot in this market.
Galax prices closely align with the Grayson County average.
| Metric | Galax | Grayson County | vs County |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $262,235 | $251,567 | +4% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 1,502 | 1,532 | -2% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $175 | $164 | +7% |
| Properties | 4,259 | 24,690 | -83% |
Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.
The average home price in Galax, VA is $262,235, based on analysis of 4,259 properties in our database.
Our database includes 4,259 properties in Galax, VA, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Galax, VA is $175. This is calculated from an average home price of $262,235 and average size of 1,502 square feet.
Homes in Galax, VA average 1,502 square feet, with an average price of $262,235.
Galax, VA is one of many cities in Grayson County, VA with property data available. Browse other cities in the county to compare market conditions and pricing.
Access owner information, tax records, transfer history, and more through our API.
View API pricingGet instant access to comprehensive county assessors-based property data with your free API key
Need Bulk Data?
Email us at hello@realie.ai