Crook County, WY
Property Data

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directly sourced from county assessors.

Total Properties

7,131

Average Home Price

Average Square Feet

Price per Sq Ft

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Total Properties
1723,477

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

7,131

Median Home Price

Average Home Price

Average Square Feet

Price per Sq Ft

Recent Sales (12mo)

YoY Price Change

Sales Velocity

Wyoming's Quiet Corner: Where the Black Hills Meet Exceptional Stability

Crook County sits in Wyoming's northeastern tip, wedged between the Black Hills of South Dakota and the Montana border — a geography that shapes everything from its economy to its identity. This is cattle country, oil and gas territory, and one of the last places in America where wide-open space isn't a selling point so much as a simple fact of life. At 3 people per square mile, "remote" barely captures it. Yet the data here tells a surprisingly robust story: a community that has quietly achieved what many larger metros spend billions trying to engineer.

The Employment Miracle Nobody's Talking About

An unemployment rate of 0.8% is, frankly, extraordinary. The national average hovers around 3-4%, and even thriving metros rarely dip below 2%. In Crook County, essentially everyone who wants a job has one. This isn't a statistical quirk — it reflects the county's dependence on agriculture, energy extraction, and natural resource industries that remained structurally stable even through broader national disruptions. The town of Sundance, the county seat, anchors a regional economy that doesn't boom and bust quite like Wyoming's more oil-dependent western counties. The result is a 6.2% poverty rate that actually beats many wealthier-sounding places, and a child poverty rate of just 1.3% that is genuinely remarkable by any measure.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Unemployment Rate0.8%vs ~3.5% national average — near statistical full employment
Median Home Value$276,80013% below national median; affordable relative to incomes
Homeownership Rate76.0%well above national average of ~65%
Rent Burden21.6%well below the 30% crisis threshold

Affordable, Owned, and Uncrowded

A price-to-income ratio of roughly 3.9x puts Crook County at almost exactly the historical national affordability benchmark — a rarity in today's housing market. Three-quarters of residents own their homes, a figure more common in Midwestern small towns than in the Mountain West, which has been hammered by remote-worker migration from California and Colorado. The 21.3% housing vacancy rate looks alarming on the surface but is typical for rural counties with large inventories of seasonal and ranch-adjacent properties rather than a sign of economic distress.

Rents averaging $881 per month with a burden rate of 21.6% represent genuine affordability — renters here are largely not in crisis, which is increasingly rare across the American West.

An Aging but Stable Community

With 22.3% of residents over 65 and a median age of 44.3, Crook County skews older than Wyoming as a whole. This mirrors a broader rural Mountain West pattern: younger workers drift toward Gillette, Casper, or Cheyenne, leaving an established, property-owning older cohort behind. The 13.8% work-from-home rate suggests some in-migration of remote workers who've discovered what outdoorspeople have long known — Devils Tower National Monument is 25 miles from Sundance, and the Black Hills offer world-class recreation with none of the Teton-county price tags.


FAQs

What makes Crook County, Wyoming unique? Crook County combines near-zero unemployment, genuine housing affordability, and sky-high homeownership in a setting most Americans associate with postcards rather than economic stability. It's one of the few rural counties in the West where the housing market hasn't been dramatically distorted by resort or remote-worker demand.

Is Crook County, Wyoming affordable to live in? Yes — unusually so for the Mountain West. With a home price-to-income ratio near the national affordability benchmark of 4x and average rents well below the national median, Crook County offers a cost profile that has largely disappeared from more visible Wyoming destinations like Jackson or even Laramie.

What industries drive Crook County's economy? Agriculture (particularly cattle ranching), oil and gas extraction, and timber historically anchor the county's employment base. Tourism tied to Devils Tower National Monument and proximity to the Black Hills also contributes, while a growing share of residents — nearly 14% — now work remotely, signaling slow but real diversification.

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