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Grand Isle County is a place most Americans have never heard of, but its real estate data tells one of the more fascinating micro-market stories in New England. Strung across a chain of islands in Lake Champlain — connected to the Vermont mainland and New York by bridges and a small ferry — this is the smallest county in Vermont by population, home to just 7,393 people spread across North Hero, South Hero, Grand Isle, and Isle La Motte. Its geography alone makes it unusual. Its housing data makes it extraordinary.
The headline number is hard to ignore: a 44.2% year-over-year price change is not a trend — it's a disruption. Even in a Vermont market that ran hot through the post-pandemic migration wave, that figure is an outlier. Lake Champlain's island communities became a specific target for remote workers and Burlington-area professionals seeking waterfront property with a genuine sense of rural seclusion, yet only a 45-minute drive from Vermont's largest city. When demand concentrates in a market with this few transactions — just 66 sales in the past 12 months across a county with over 5,000 housing units — a handful of premium lakefront closings can move the median dramatically.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| YoY Price Change | +44.2% | extreme volatility in thin market |
| Homeownership Rate | 90.9% | among highest in the US; national avg ~65% |
| Vacancy Rate | 41.9% | reflects massive seasonal/second-home inventory |
| Rent Burden | 43.6% | well above the 30% threshold; renters squeezed hard |
A 41.9% vacancy rate sounds like a struggling rust belt town. Here, it means something entirely different: Grand Isle County is saturated with seasonal camps, lakefront cottages, and second homes that sit empty for large portions of the year. This is vacation-home Vermont, and the permanent population of roughly 7,400 shares the islands with a much larger population of part-time residents whose primary address is Burlington, Boston, or beyond. This dynamic suppresses the rental market — only 9.1% of occupied units are renter-occupied — and explains why the median rent of $1,436 lands so hard. The tiny renter population has almost no affordable options, with nearly a quarter of renters experiencing severe rent burden.
The median age of 48.7 and the fact that more than one in five residents is 65 or older paints Grand Isle as a place where people come to settle down, not start out. Household income at $90,625 runs well above the national median, and the 16.2% work-from-home rate confirms that remote flexibility has become part of the county's economic fabric. Yet a Gini Index of 0.461 — higher than Vermont's already-elevated statewide figure — tells you the prosperity isn't evenly distributed. There's a meaningful gap between the lakefront homeowner and the year-round renter trying to find stability in a market increasingly shaped by seasonal wealth.
What makes Grand Isle County unique? It's Vermont's only island county, entirely surrounded by Lake Champlain, which creates a physically constrained housing supply that amplifies price swings. The combination of near-total homeownership, a massive seasonal housing stock, and a tiny permanent population makes it behave less like a conventional county and more like a resort community with a ZIP code.
Why are home prices in Grand Isle County rising so fast? A very thin transaction market — fewer than 70 sales per year — means that an influx of Burlington commuters and remote workers competing for waterfront or near-water properties can produce outsized percentage moves. Supply is essentially fixed by geography, and demand has structurally increased since 2020.
Is Grand Isle County affordable for renters? Largely no. The rental market is minimal by design — less than 10% of homes are rentals — and with nearly 44% of renters spending more than 30% of income on housing, those who don't own are navigating one of the tightest and most expensive small rental markets in Vermont.
Our database includes 6,517 properties in Grand Isle County.
With an average price of $462,085, Grand Isle County offers mid-range housing options.
The price per square foot of $277 reflects strong property valuations in this area.
Home prices in Grand Isle County are 18% higher than the Vermont average.
| Metric | Grand Isle County | Vermont Avg | vs State |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $462,085 | $390,909 | +18% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 1,671 | 1,605 | +4% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $277 | $244 | +14% |
| Properties | 6,517 | 392,941 | -98% |
Based on property sales data from the last 18 months
The average home price in Grand Isle County, VT is $462,085, based on analysis of 6,517 properties in our database.
Our database includes 6,517 properties in Grand Isle County, VT, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Grand Isle County, VT is $277. This is calculated from an average home price of $462,085 and average size of 1,671 square feet.
Homes in Grand Isle County, VT average 1,671 square feet, with an average price of $462,085.
Grand Isle County, VT is one of 14 counties in Vermont with property data available. Browse other counties to compare market conditions and pricing.
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