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Clark County

IN · Pop. 122,800 · Mixed County

55/100Homestead Score

Clark County is a mixed rural-suburban county in Indiana, spanning 372 square miles with 122,800 residents at a density of 330.1 people per square mile, a more developed setting where truly rural parcels are scarcer. The agricultural economy is rated moderate, built on soybeans, corn, hay. A median home price of $212,000 and an effective property tax rate of 0.74% set the cost of entry. The climate sits in USDA hardiness zone 7a with a 175-day growing season, average summer highs of 85.7°F and average winter lows of 23.7°F. Annual rainfall averages 43.3 inches, and with drought risk rated high, water storage and irrigation planning matter. Norton Brownsboro Hospital is 13.3 miles away and includes an emergency room. Broadband reaches 97.6% of homes. On the hazard side, flood risk is very high, tornado risk is very high, drought risk is high, so plan infrastructure and insurance accordingly.

Property Tax: 0.74%
Growing Season: 175 days
Broadband: 97.6%
Density: 330.1/sq mi

Pros

  • A low effective property tax rate of 0.74% holds annual carrying costs down.
  • Broadband reaches 97.6% of homes, making remote work and online farm sales realistic.
  • A low unemployment rate of 3.5% reflects a stable local job base.
  • A low poverty rate of 9.3% signals a relatively stable local economy.

Cons

  • Tornado risk is very high, so a storm shelter and wind-resistant structures are practical necessities.
  • Flood risk is very high, so careful parcel siting and flood insurance are essential.
  • At 330.1 people per square mile, this is a developed area where finding truly rural acreage is harder and pricier.

At a glance

Clark County, IN is a solid homesteading option with some tradeoffs.

Homestead score
55/100
Median home price
$212k
Property tax
0.74%
Growing season
175 days (zone 7a)
Annual rainfall
43.3"
Broadband
97.6%
Nearest hospital
Norton Brownsboro Hospital, 13.3 mi

Taxes & Cost of Living

Property Tax Rate0.74%
Median Household Income$72,298
Poverty Rate9.3%

Land & Building

Median Home Price$212K

Climate & Growing

USDA Zone7a
Growing Season175 days
Annual Rainfall43.3 inches
Avg Summer High85.7°F
Avg Winter Low23.7°F
Top CropsSoybeans, Corn, Hay

Natural Disaster Risk

Drought5/10
Wildfire3/10
Tornado10/10
Flood9/10

Healthcare

Nearest HospitalNorton Brownsboro Hospital (13.3 mi)
Emergency RoomYes
Healthcare Facilities4

Infrastructure & Community

Broadband Coverage97.6%

Business & Employment

Unemployment Rate3.5%
Ag EconomyModerate

Homesteading in Clark County: FAQ

What is the growing season like in Clark County?
Clark County is in USDA hardiness zone 7a with a 175-day growing season, average summer highs of 85.7°F, and average winter lows of 23.7°F. The established crops are soybeans, corn, hay.
How affordable is land and property here?
The median home price is $212,000 and the effective property tax rate is 0.74%. County-level per-acre prices aren't published, so compare current local listings for raw land.
Is broadband internet available?
Broadband reaches 97.6% of homes, strong coverage that supports remote work for most parcels.
How close is healthcare?
Norton Brownsboro Hospital is 13.3 miles away and includes an emergency room; there are 4 hospitals in the county.

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Nearby counties

The closest counties to Clark County by distance, including across state lines.

Data sources

Verified

Figures are sourced from public datasets: U.S. Census Bureau — ACS 5-year & Gazetteer, USDA NASS Census of Agriculture, USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map, NOAA NCEI U.S. Climate Normals (1991–2020), FEMA National Risk Index, FCC Broadband Data Collection, BLS Local Area Unemployment Statistics, HIFLD Hospitals. Always confirm specifics locally before relying on them. See our methodology for how the homestead score is calculated.