Tinkerville Road

Property details·Glasgow, Rockbridge County, Virginia·107-5-1

Location

Address

Tinkerville Road

Glasgow, VA 24555

Rockbridge County

Parcel ID

107-5-1

Coordinates

37.655991, -79.493480

County context

Rockbridge County 2026 Insights

The Shenandoah Valley's Hidden Real Estate Story

Nestled between the Blue Ridge and Allegheny mountains, Rockbridge County is the kind of place that shows up in weekend travel features about Lexington's Victorian streetscapes and Natural Bridge State Park — but rarely in conversations about housing market dynamics. That's a mistake. A 21.6% year-over-year price increase in a rural Virginia county with a median age of nearly 50 and a labor force participation rate of just 55.7% is not the story of a boomtown. It's something more complicated, and more interesting.

A Market Driven by Institutions and Outsiders

Rockbridge County's economic identity is inseparable from Washington and Lee University and Virginia Military Institute, both headquartered in Lexington, the county seat. These institutions bring a steady rotation of faculty, administrators, and affiliated buyers who rarely fit the profile of the surrounding working population. The result is a market with extraordinary price dispersion: entry-level properties begin around $80,000, while the top decile stretches past $749,000 — a nearly tenfold gap that reflects two largely separate buyer pools operating in the same zip codes.

That 21.6% price surge is almost certainly being amplified by remote-work migration. With only 105 recorded sales in the past 12 months against a total of 192 tracked properties, this is a thin market where a handful of high-value sales from relocating professionals can meaningfully skew the median. The average sale price of $381,100 running nearly $90,000 above the median tells exactly that story.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$291,500below national median of $320,000 but closing fast
YoY Price Change+21.6%nearly 4x the typical national appreciation rate
Homeownership Rate78.4%well above the national average of ~65%
Vacancy Rate15.6%signals second-home and seasonal ownership patterns

An Aging, Settled Population Under Pressure

More than a quarter of Rockbridge County residents are 65 or older — a figure that explains both the high homeownership rate and the low labor force participation. This is a community of long-term residents who bought decades ago and aren't moving. The median home was built in 1978, the vast majority are single-family structures, and almost nobody rents by choice. For the 21.6% who do rent, though, conditions are tightening: a rent burden rate of 34.7% already exceeds the 30% stress threshold, and 12.3% of renters are severely cost-burdened.

The 15.6% vacancy rate is the detail that ties everything together — far above what healthy primary housing markets sustain. Many of those empty units are likely second homes or seasonal retreats owned by people whose primary address is Northern Virginia, Richmond, or further afield.


FAQs

What makes Rockbridge County unique? The combination of two prominent universities, dramatic mountain scenery, and a thin but rapidly appreciating housing market creates unusual dynamics. Buyers from outside the county — retirees, remote workers, and second-home seekers — are competing in a market sized for a small rural population, driving prices up in ways the local income base alone could never sustain.

Is Rockbridge County affordable for local residents? At a median home price of $291,500 against a median household income of $63,975, the price-to-income ratio sits around 4.6x — modestly above the national benchmark but still manageable by Virginia standards. The more pressing concern is for renters, who are already paying above the standard affordability threshold and facing double-digit annual price increases with few new units being built.

Why are home prices rising so fast in a rural county? Low inventory, remote-work migration, and the gravitational pull of Washington and Lee and VMI's faculty and alumni networks are converging in a market with historically little turnover. When fewer than 110 homes change hands annually, it doesn't take many well-funded out-of-market buyers to reset price expectations dramatically.

Local market context

Our database includes 5,209 properties in Glasgow.

Glasgow offers affordable housing with an average price of $228,714.

With a price per square foot of just $140, this area offers excellent value for buyers.

Home prices in Glasgow are 45% lower than the Rockbridge County average.

MetricGlasgowRockbridge Countyvs County
Average Price$228,714$419,359-45%
Avg Sq Ft1,6291,882-13%
Price/Sq Ft$140$223-37%
Properties5,20931,003-83%

Nearby properties

Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.

Frequently Asked Questions About Glasgow, VA Real Estate

What is the average home price in Glasgow, VA?

The average home price in Glasgow, VA is $228,714, based on analysis of 5,209 properties in our database.

How many properties are tracked in Glasgow, VA?

Our database includes 5,209 properties in Glasgow, VA, providing comprehensive market coverage.

What is the price per square foot in Glasgow, VA?

The average price per square foot in Glasgow, VA is $140. This is calculated from an average home price of $228,714 and average size of 1,629 square feet.

What is the average home size in Glasgow, VA?

Homes in Glasgow, VA average 1,629 square feet, with an average price of $228,714.

How does Glasgow, VA compare to other cities in Rockbridge County?

Glasgow, VA is one of many cities in Rockbridge County, VA with property data available. Browse other cities in the county to compare market conditions and pricing.

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