N9624 Ison Lane

Property details·Langlade, Langlade County, Wisconsin·012-1253

1.52Acres

Location

Address

N9624 Ison Lane

Langlade, WI 54465

Langlade County

Parcel ID

012-1253

Coordinates

45.376884, -88.896192

Land & lot

Lot size
1.52 acres
Land area
66,211 sq ft
Land use code
1999

Tax & assessment

CategoryAmount
Tax value$832.15
Market value$73,100
Assessed value$53,100
Building value$53,689
Land value$19,411

Values reflect public tax roll data as of the year shown.

County context

Langlade County 2026 Insights

Where Northwoods Affordability Meets a Graying Frontier

Langlade County sits in Wisconsin's Northwoods, a vast stretch of lakes, forests, and small towns centered on Antigo, the county seat. It's a place most Wisconsinites associate with snowmobiling, deer hunting, and the Wolf River — not with real estate headlines. And yet the data here tells a quietly compelling story: one of the most affordable housing markets in the Midwest, an aging population reshaping community needs, and a vacancy rate that reveals something far more complex than simple decline.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Value$145,80045.6% of the national median ($320,000)
Homeownership Rate78.0%well above the national ~65%
Vacancy Rate29.5%nearly 3x the typical suburban benchmark
Median Age49.0among the oldest county medians in Wisconsin

The Affordability Paradox

At first glance, Langlade looks like a buyer's paradise. A median home at $145,800 against a household income of $57,258 produces a price-to-income ratio of just 2.5x — a figure that urban buyers in Madison or Milwaukee, suffocating under 6x or 7x ratios, would find almost unbelievable. Rents average $737 a month. Yet affordability alone isn't driving population growth here — it's partly a symptom of limited demand, a labor market anchored in healthcare, retail, and forestry-adjacent trades rather than the tech or professional sectors driving appreciation elsewhere.

That 29.5% Vacancy Rate Needs an Explanation

Nearly three in ten housing units sit vacant — but this isn't Detroit-style abandonment. In Wisconsin's lake counties, seasonal and recreational properties dominate the vacant stock. Langlade's 12,202 total units vastly outnumber its 8,606 households precisely because thousands of those homes are cabins, hunting properties, and seasonal retreats owned by residents of Green Bay, Chicago, or the Twin Cities. This dynamic suppresses year-round population density to just 22 people per square mile while keeping underlying property demand — and property tax revenue — meaningfully higher than raw residential numbers suggest.

An Aging County at a Crossroads

The median age of 49 and a 65-plus population of 25.1% aren't just demographic footnotes — they're the county's defining challenge. With only 12.1% of residents holding a bachelor's degree and a labor force participation rate of 58.6% (well below the national 63%), Langlade reflects a generational pattern familiar across rural Wisconsin: younger adults leave for college and don't return, while retirees and long-term residents stay. The 17.5% disability rate — elevated even by rural standards — signals both an older population and the physical toll of decades in agriculture, logging, and manufacturing trades.

The low uninsured rate of 5.0% is a genuine bright spot, suggesting that Medicaid expansion and employer-sponsored coverage have reached much of this working population despite its economic profile.


FAQs

What makes Langlade County unique in Wisconsin's real estate market? Langlade offers some of the most accessible home prices in the state, but its housing market is fundamentally shaped by its dual identity: a year-round rural community and a recreational destination. That 29.5% vacancy rate isn't distress — it's cabins, deer camps, and lake properties sitting empty nine months a year. Buyers who understand this distinction can find remarkable value in a genuinely livable small-town setting.

Is Langlade County growing or shrinking? The demographic signals point toward gradual contraction. A median age of 49, a shrinking share of residents under 18 (19.3%), and a limited professional job base make sustained population growth unlikely in the near term. That said, remote work trends have nudged interest in Northwoods properties, and Antigo's service economy remains functional. The county isn't in freefall — it's in the kind of slow demographic transition that characterizes much of rural northern Wisconsin.

Is it affordable to rent in Antigo and Langlade County? At $737 median rent, Langlade is remarkably affordable by any national standard. A 30.8% rent burden rate — just barely above the standard 30% threshold — suggests renters here are walking a fine line, not because rents are high but because incomes in the service and retail sectors are modest. For anyone relocating from a major metro, the numbers feel almost implausibly low.

Nearby properties

Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.

Want more property data?

Access owner information, tax records, transfer history, and more through our API.

View API pricing

Access Langlade County, WI Property Data Through Our Enterprise API

Get instant access to comprehensive county assessors-based property data with your free API key

Need Bulk Data?

Email us at hello@realie.ai