850 Larkspur Drive

Property details·Brookfield, Waukesha County, Wisconsin·BKFT1122032

3Beds
3.5Baths
2,448Sq ft
0.46Acres
1994Built
$332KLast sale

Location

Address

850 Larkspur Drive

Brookfield, WI 53045

Waukesha County

Parcel ID

BKFT1122032

Coordinates

43.041660, -88.163592

Building details

Bedrooms
3
Bathrooms
3.5
Square feet
2,448
Year built
1994
Garage
2-car A

Land & lot

Lot size
0.46 acres
Land area
20,038 sq ft
Subdivision
The Meadows At Poplar Creek
Land use code
1001

Tax & assessment

CategoryAmount
Tax value$4,642.75
Market value$521,600
Assessed value$483,300

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

County context

Waukesha County 2026 Insights

Waukesha County, Wisconsin: Milwaukee's Affluent Backyard Defies the Rust Belt Narrative

If you want to understand why Wisconsin's housing market keeps surprising national observers, start with Waukesha County. Sitting immediately west of Milwaukee, this suburban county of 409,000 has quietly become one of the most economically resilient communities in the upper Midwest — and its housing market is now moving with an urgency that most people associate with Sun Belt metros, not the Frost Belt.

Prices here rose 9.9% year-over-year, a number that would turn heads in Phoenix. In the context of Wisconsin — a state not exactly known for frothy real estate — it's remarkable. The median sale price of $480,000 sits well above the census-measured median home value of $373,600, which means recent transactions are pulling the market significantly above its baseline. Buyers aren't just moving here; they're competing here.

The Wealth Factor — and What It Costs to Rent

The county's economic profile is genuinely striking. At $104,100, the median household income runs nearly 40% above the national median, reflecting a professional class concentrated in healthcare, manufacturing, insurance, and technology — industries anchored by major employers like Waukesha-based GE Healthcare, Northwestern Mutual (whose employees spill west from downtown Milwaukee), and a robust small-business ecosystem along the I-94 corridor.

That wealth, however, creates a paradox for renters. The median rent of $1,300 might look modest by coastal standards, but with 42.9% of renters spending more than 30% of income on housing — and 22.3% facing severe rent burden — the county's renter class is quietly squeezed. In a place this affluent, those numbers reveal a genuine affordability gap: the rental supply hasn't kept pace with a market that increasingly skews toward ownership.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$480,00050% above national median home value
YoY Price Change+9.9%among the fastest-appreciating counties in Wisconsin
Homeownership Rate76.4%well above the national rate of ~65%
Severe Rent Burden22.3%nearly 1 in 4 renters paying 50%+ of income on housing

A County Built for Ownership — At Scale

With 76.4% of households owning their homes and single-family homes comprising nearly 70% of the housing stock, Waukesha is textbook postwar suburbia, built and maintained for the ownership class. The median home dates to 1977, meaning the housing stock is aging but well-maintained — Waukesha's low 3.9% vacancy rate suggests demand keeps even older inventory absorbed. The near-total absence of car-free commuters (just 0.2% use public transit; 77.5% drive alone) reinforces how deeply the county's spatial logic depends on the automobile, which in turn reinforces low-density single-family development.

The 15.3% work-from-home rate is meaningful context here: remote workers with Milwaukee- or Chicago-level salaries are increasingly stretching into Waukesha's quieter subdivisions, which likely explains some of that price acceleration.


What makes Waukesha County unique? It combines Midwest affordability expectations with near-coastal income levels and appreciation rates — creating a market that feels undervalued from the outside but increasingly pressured from within.

Is Waukesha County a good place to buy a home in 2024? For buyers with stable, above-median incomes, yes — but the entry bar is rising fast. At 9.9% annual appreciation and a $480,000 median, the window for "affordable suburban Milwaukee" is narrowing quickly.

Why are rents so expensive in such a wealthy county? Waukesha's development pattern heavily favors ownership, leaving a thin rental supply for a growing group of residents — including younger workers and downsizing seniors — who can't or won't buy, pushing rent burden well past healthy thresholds.

Local market context

Brookfield has 22,018 properties in our comprehensive database.

Properties in Brookfield average $574,244, reflecting a competitive market.

The price per square foot of $274 reflects strong property valuations in this area.

Home prices in Brookfield are 6% higher than the Waukesha County average.

MetricBrookfieldWaukesha Countyvs County
Average Price$574,244$544,215+6%
Avg Sq Ft2,0972,027+3%
Price/Sq Ft$274$268+2%
Properties22,018223,305-90%

Nearby properties

Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.

Frequently Asked Questions About Brookfield, WI Real Estate

What is the average home price in Brookfield, WI?

The average home price in Brookfield, WI is $574,244, based on analysis of 22,018 properties in our database.

How many properties are tracked in Brookfield, WI?

Our database includes 22,018 properties in Brookfield, WI, providing comprehensive market coverage.

What is the price per square foot in Brookfield, WI?

The average price per square foot in Brookfield, WI is $274. This is calculated from an average home price of $574,244 and average size of 2,097 square feet.

What is the average home size in Brookfield, WI?

Homes in Brookfield, WI average 2,097 square feet, with an average price of $574,244.

How does Brookfield, WI compare to other cities in Waukesha County?

Brookfield, WI is one of many cities in Waukesha County, WI with property data available. Browse other cities in the county to compare market conditions and pricing.

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