12202 East County Road A
Avalon, WI 53505
Rock County
6-9-188.1C
42.699814, -88.804425
| Category | Amount | Year |
|---|---|---|
| Tax value | $1,377.65 | 2026 |
| Market value | $130,700 | 2025 |
| Assessed value | $76,100 | 2026 |
Values reflect public tax roll data as of the year shown.
County context
There's a certain irony embedded in Rock County's housing data: a county that spent decades synonymous with industrial decline — most famously the 2009 closure of the Janesville General Motors assembly plant, which had operated for nearly a century — now posts some of the most quietly stable real estate fundamentals in Wisconsin. The median home price of $254,650 sits at roughly 3.4x the county's median household income, well below the national affordability benchmark of 4x and a fraction of what buyers in Madison or Milwaukee are absorbing. For a county that was once a case study in Midwest economic pain, that's a meaningful turnaround.
Rock County's housing stock tells you exactly who lives here. The median year built of 1961 reflects a county shaped by mid-century manufacturing prosperity — solid, unpretentious homes built for working families, now trading at $166 per square foot. That's not a distressed market; it's an accessible one. The 10th percentile of sale prices sits at $100,000, meaning entry-level buyers still have genuine options, while the 90th percentile caps around $457,000 — a spread that suggests a functioning market rather than a bifurcated one where affordability exists only in name.
Homeownership at 70.6% runs notably above the national average, which makes sense: when homes are priced within reach of median incomes, ownership becomes a realistic aspiration rather than a generational lottery. The single-family home share of 74.3% reinforces this owner-occupier culture.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $254,650 | ~3.4x median income — well below 4x national benchmark |
| Homeownership Rate | 70.6% | Above national avg; ownership is genuinely accessible here |
| YoY Price Change | +4.0% | Steady, non-speculative appreciation |
| Rent Burden Rate | 40.5% | 19% of renters severely burdened — the one pressure point |
If there's a fault line in Rock County's otherwise moderate housing story, it runs directly through its rental market. A median rent of $1,019 may sound reasonable in absolute terms, but with 40.5% of renters classified as rent-burdened and 19.1% facing severe burden, a significant share of Janesville and Beloit households are stretched thin. This is the county's most acute housing challenge — not a frothy ownership market, but a rental sector where wages and rents haven't moved in tandem.
With 33.3% of adults holding a high school diploma as their highest credential and only 17.7% with a bachelor's degree, Rock County skews toward trade and manufacturing employment rather than the knowledge economy. A limited English-speaking population of 15.6% — notably high for a Wisconsin county — reflects Beloit's growing immigrant workforce, drawn by food processing and light industrial employers. Child poverty at 13.9% and a SNAP participation rate of 12.9% suggest the post-GM recovery remains uneven across generations.
What makes Rock County, Wisconsin unique? Rock County occupies a rare position: genuinely affordable housing in a functioning market, not a struggling one. The post-GM closure reinvention — anchored by logistics, healthcare, and manufacturing diversification in Janesville and Beloit — has produced stable employment without the price inflation that follows tech-driven booms. You can still buy a livable home here for under $200,000.
Is Rock County a good place to buy a home right now? For buyers priced out of Dane County (Madison), Rock County offers the most compelling value within commuting distance. At $166 per square foot with 4% annual appreciation and a price-to-income ratio well below national norms, the fundamentals favor buyers — particularly those who can tolerate a car-dependent lifestyle, since public transit covers only 0.5% of commuters.
Why is rent burden so high if housing is affordable? Rock County's affordability story applies almost exclusively to owners. Renters — concentrated in Beloit and parts of Janesville — tend to earn less than the county median, and the rental supply hasn't expanded enough to keep pace with demand from households not yet positioned to buy. It's a classic affordability paradox: cheap to own, costly to rent.
Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.
Access owner information, tax records, transfer history, and more through our API.
View API pricingGet instant access to comprehensive county assessors-based property data with your free API key
Need Bulk Data?
Email us at hello@realie.ai