Lamoille County, VT
Property Data

Explore accurate parcel and ownership records,
directly sourced from county assessors.

Total Properties

17,052

Average Home Price

$581,878

Average Square Feet

1,871

Price per Sq Ft

$275

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
3864,552

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

17,052

Median Home Price

$351,000

Average Home Price

$581,878

Average Square Feet

1,871

Price per Sq Ft

$275

Recent Sales (12mo)

231

YoY Price Change

2.9%

Sales Velocity

72.4%

Stowe's Shadow: The Surprising Contradictions of Lamoille County's Housing Market

Lamoille County is home to Stowe — Vermont's most storied ski resort, a destination that draws wealthy second-home buyers from Boston, New York, and beyond. That single fact explains almost everything puzzling in this county's housing data, and it makes Lamoille one of the most economically bifurcated small counties in New England.

The headline number that demands attention: a 19.2% vacancy rate. Nearly one in five housing units sits empty on any given census count. This isn't blight — it's bedrooms waiting for ski season. Stowe's resort economy has long driven a second-home market that inflates property values while doing little for local housing supply. The consequence is a county where the average sale price of $544,539 towers nearly 60% above the median of $350,000 — a gap that signals a thin but powerful tier of luxury transactions pulling the mean skyward. The P90 price of $1.19 million confirms it: the top tenth of this market is firmly vacation-home territory.

A Gini Problem Hidden in the Green Mountains

Lamoille County's Gini index of 0.463 is strikingly high for a rural Vermont county of just 26,000 people. For context, the national Gini coefficient hovers around 0.49, meaning this small alpine county approaches the income inequality of the country as a whole — something you'd expect from a major metro, not a place with moose crossings on Route 100. The resort economy creates exactly this dynamic: seasonal hospitality workers and year-round tradespeople living alongside wealthy remote workers and part-time residents.

That 15.6% limited English figure is also worth pausing on. In a county this small and this rural, it suggests a substantial migrant workforce — likely in hospitality, landscaping, and construction — that is economically essential but largely invisible in the headline income statistics.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Vacancy Rate19.2%~2.5x national average — driven by second-home inventory
Rent Burden40.0%Well above 30% threshold; 15% face severe burden
YoY Price Change-4.0%Cooling after pandemic-era remote-work surge
Homeownership Rate72.7%Above national avg, but distorted by seasonal owners

The Pandemic Hangover

That -4.0% year-over-year price decline tells an important post-pandemic story. Vermont — and Stowe in particular — was a massive beneficiary of the 2020–2022 remote work migration. Buyers fled cities for mountain towns, and Lamoille County prices surged. Now, with return-to-office pressures and rising interest rates biting, that froth is coming off. The correction is real, but with only 179 sales recorded in the past 12 months against 14,138 total housing units, this is an exceptionally illiquid market. Prices here don't move on volume — they move on sentiment.

For working residents, the math remains brutal. A median household income of $69,897 against a median home price of $350,000 yields a price-to-income ratio of roughly 5x — uncomfortable, but not exceptional for Vermont. The more honest affordability problem is in the rental market: median rent of $1,123 consuming 40% of renter household income means the county's service workers, teachers, and young families are being priced into precarity while ski chalets sit dark eleven months of the year.


FAQs

What makes Lamoille County unique in Vermont's housing market? Lamoille County contains Stowe, Vermont's premier ski destination, which creates a dual housing economy almost without parallel in the state. Luxury second-home demand coexists with a local workforce housing shortage, producing high vacancy rates, wide price dispersion, and income inequality that looks more like a resort town in Colorado than a typical Vermont county.

Is now a good time to buy in Lamoille County? Prices are down 4% year-over-year after the pandemic surge, and the market is thin — only 179 sales in the past year. For primary-home buyers, the correction offers a modest window, but inventory remains constrained by owners who hold rather than sell. For investment buyers eyeing the Stowe rental market, short-term rental regulations are worth researching carefully before committing.

Why is the rent burden so high in Lamoille County if rents seem relatively modest? The median rent of $1,123 appears low by coastal standards, but local wages in hospitality and services are also low. When housing costs exceed 30% of gross income — the standard threshold — households face real financial stress. With 40% of renters in that position and 15% spending more than half their income on rent, the affordability crisis here is a wage problem as much as a housing supply problem.

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