Property details·Pacific, Pierce County, Washington·9009500010
218 Stewart Road Southeast
Unit 218 Stewart Rd Se #1
Pacific, WA 98047
Pierce County
9009500010
47.247980, -122.247131
| Category | Amount | Year |
|---|---|---|
| Tax value | $38,159.39 | 2026 |
| Market value | $3,209,400 | 2025 |
| Assessed value | $3,209,400 | 2026 |
| Building value | $1,993,500 | — |
| Land value | $1,215,900 | — |
Values reflect public tax roll data as of the year shown.
County context
Pierce County defies easy categorization. It's home to Joint Base Lewis-McChord — one of the largest military installations in the country — which means nearly 12% of its residents are veterans, a figure that shapes everything from housing demand patterns to the county's relatively younger median age of 36.8. It's also the county seat of Tacoma, a city that spent decades trying to escape Seattle's gravitational pull and is now, somewhat ironically, being defined by it. The result is a housing market caught between military stability, working-class roots, and a wave of Seattle-spillover demand that has now, at least temporarily, reversed course.
The headline number here is striking: a -17.2% year-over-year price change in a county where the median home still costs $455,000. That's not a gentle correction — that's one of the sharper pullbacks in the Pacific Northwest. Context matters enormously here. Pierce County was a primary beneficiary of the pandemic-era migration boom, when remote workers priced out of Seattle's $800,000+ market flooded Tacoma and its suburbs, bidding prices to unsustainable levels. As remote work mandates tightened and mortgage rates climbed through 2023-2024, that demand evaporated faster than it arrived. The correction isn't a sign of structural weakness; it's the hangover from an artificial high.
The P10-to-P90 price spread — from $179,000 to $850,000 — tells you this county contains multitudes. Lakewood and Parkland offer entry points that King County buyers haven't seen in a decade. Gig Harbor and Key Peninsula command premiums that rival Eastside suburbs.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $455,000 | Down 17.2% YoY; still 42% above national median |
| Rent Burden Rate | 49.8% | Far above the 30% stress threshold |
| Veterans Share | 11.5% | ~2x national average; JBLM effect |
| Bachelor's Degree or Higher | 30.1% | Trails Washington state average of ~38% |
While owners weather a price correction, renters have no such relief. A rent burden rate of nearly 50% — meaning the typical renter household spends close to half its income on housing — is a quiet crisis. Nearly one in four renter households is severely rent burdened, paying over 50% of income on rent. With median rent at $1,722 and median household income at $96,632 (solid on paper but unevenly distributed across a 924,000-person county), the Gini coefficient of 0.420 signals meaningful inequality beneath the averages. SNAP participation at 11.8% and a child poverty rate of 10.3% confirm that prosperity here is not evenly shared.
Pierce County has an unusually powerful dual identity — a working-class port city anchored by one of America's biggest military bases, now absorbing the overflow of one of America's most expensive metro areas. Few counties simultaneously host this combination of economic forces, which creates unusual volatility in housing cycles and a renter population under genuine financial stress even as ownership rates (64.8%) exceed the national norm.
Is Tacoma/Pierce County still affordable compared to Seattle? Relatively, yes — but the gap has narrowed dramatically. At $455,000 median, Pierce County homes cost roughly 40% less than King County, but that discount shrinks when you factor in similar mortgage rates and a steeper income gap for local workers who aren't remote-employed.
How does the military base affect Pierce County's housing market? JBLM creates a stable, non-cyclical demand floor. Military families on PCS orders must relocate regardless of market conditions, which insulates certain submarkets — particularly near Lakewood and DuPont — from the worst of price corrections while also contributing to rental demand that keeps vacancy rates (5.2%) from spiking even as prices fall.
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