Property details·Maple Valley, King County, Washington·132206-9049
26808 Southeast 230th Street
Maple Valley, WA 98038
King County
132206-9049
47.396526, -121.982884
| Category | Amount | Year |
|---|---|---|
| Tax value | $4,917.36 | 2026 |
| Market value | $411,000 | 2024 |
| Assessed value | $411,000 | 2026 |
| Building value | $57,000 | — |
| Land value | $354,000 | — |
Values reflect public tax roll data as of the year shown.
County context
King County doesn't just house Amazon and Microsoft — it reflects them. The county's $122,148 median household income is 62% above the national median, a gap built almost entirely on the gravitational pull of the Puget Sound tech corridor. But the more revealing number isn't at the top: it's the Gini coefficient of 0.479, which places King County among the most economically unequal large counties in the United States. This is a place where software engineers and warehouse workers share zip codes but not economic realities.
That inequality is baked into the housing market in ways that are both visible and startling.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $850,000 | 2.7x the national median |
| Price-to-Income Ratio | ~7x | vs. 4x national benchmark |
| Rent Burden Rate | 44.7% | severely above 30% threshold |
| YoY Price Change | +6.1% | accelerating from post-pandemic plateau |
The spread between the 10th and 90th percentile home prices — from $420,000 to $2,040,000 — tells you everything about what "the King County housing market" actually means. There is no single market here. There's Bellevue and Medina, where waterfront estates and tech executive compounds anchor the upper range. And there's South King County — Federal Way, Renton, Kent — where working families compete fiercely for the diminishing supply of homes under $500,000. The average price per square foot of $539 exceeds what entire homes cost in large swaths of the American Midwest.
What's particularly striking is that the average sale price ($1.1 million) runs more than $250,000 above the median ($850,000) — a sign that luxury sales are actively skewing the county's center of gravity upward. King County isn't expensive in a uniform way; it's expensive in a lopsided way.
At 26.2%, King County's remote work rate is among the highest of any major U.S. county — a direct legacy of its employer base. This has had a counterintuitive effect on density: rather than depopulating downtown Seattle, it has intensified competition for larger suburban homes in Kirkland, Issaquah, and Sammamish, where families want a home office and a yard. The county's median year built of 1980 means much of its housing stock was never designed for remote work — and renovation demand has added another layer of upward price pressure.
With 43.9% of households renting and a median rent of $2,035, the math is brutal for lower-income residents. A full 21% of renters are severely rent-burdened — paying over half their income on housing — and the county-wide rent burden of 44.7% blows past the standard 30% affordability threshold by a wide margin. The 8.2% SNAP enrollment rate, sitting alongside a 4.7% unemployment rate, suggests that employment alone is no longer sufficient insulation against food insecurity in one of America's most expensive counties.
The 6.1% vacancy rate is deceptively healthy-looking. King County isn't sitting on empty homes — it's cycling inventory through 13,938 sales in the past year at a pace that keeps buyers perpetually scrambling.
What makes King County, Washington unique in the U.S. housing market? King County is the rare place where extreme income and extreme housing costs coexist with deep inequality. It's home to two of the world's largest technology companies, which have driven wages — and prices — to levels that price out most of the country, yet nearly one in ten residents still lives below the poverty line.
Is King County actually affordable if you work in tech? For six-figure earners, the math works — barely. At a $122,148 median income, a $850,000 home still represents a 7x price-to-income ratio, well above the 4x national benchmark considered healthy. For dual-income tech households earning $200,000+, ownership is achievable. For everyone else, the county's 44.7% rent burden statistic is the more relevant number.
Is the King County housing market slowing down? Not based on recent data. After a brief post-pandemic cooldown in 2022–2023, prices are again accelerating at 6.1% year-over-year — faster than wage growth for most residents, meaning affordability is quietly worsening even as the economy appears strong.
Maple Valley has 14,333 properties in our comprehensive database.
Properties in Maple Valley average $845,451, reflecting a competitive market.
The price per square foot of $373 reflects strong property valuations in this area.
Home prices in Maple Valley are 23% lower than the King County average.
| Metric | Maple Valley | King County | vs County |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $845,451 | $1,100,404 | -23% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 2,268 | 2,187 | +4% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $373 | $503 | -26% |
| Properties | 14,333 | 770,082 | -98% |
Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.
The average home price in Maple Valley, WA is $845,451, based on analysis of 14,333 properties in our database.
Our database includes 14,333 properties in Maple Valley, WA, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Maple Valley, WA is $373. This is calculated from an average home price of $845,451 and average size of 2,268 square feet.
Homes in Maple Valley, WA average 2,268 square feet, with an average price of $845,451.
Maple Valley, WA is one of many cities in King County, WA with property data available. Browse other cities in the county to compare market conditions and pricing.
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