Local costs · Indiana
What it costs to own a home in Pike County, Indiana
The real property-tax rate, risk-adjusted insurance, and honest closing costs for Pike County — with the all-in monthly cost of the area’s median-priced home and the income it takes to carry it comfortably.
The headline numbers
US Census, ACS 2024 5-year
Run these numbers with your income →
The “median home” here is the Indiana statewide median owner-occupied value ($243,500, US Census ACS 2024 1-year) — no county-level median is available in our data, so it is labeled as a state figure. The all-in monthly uses the real-life basis: loan payment $1,222, property tax $158, insurance $100, maintenance $203 (1%/yr rule of thumb), and utilities $275 (a placeholder, not yet sourced). With 20% down there is no mortgage insurance.
Local risk flags
No natural-hazard flags for Pike County in the FEMA National Risk Index — no covered peril rates Relatively High or Very High here. That does not mean zero risk; check the specific address’s flood zone before you buy.
Closing costs, in detail
Indiana charges no state transfer or recording tax on a home purchase.
- Transfer & recording tax
- On the $243,500 median home, the buyer’s customary share is about $0. Only the buyer’s share is counted in the closing-cost estimate above.
- Title insurance & settlement
- Indiana uses competitive (filed) rates. Estimated $1,575–$2,131 on this home. Modeled title insurance + settlement (national declining-rate curve, ~0.76% of price at this level). Not a state-promulgated rate.
- Lender and origination
- $974–$1,948. Modeled as 0.5-1.0% of loan amount.
- Appraisal, inspection, and reports
- $900–$1,800. Flat buyer-paid diligence estimate.
- Prepaids and escrow
- $932–$1,448. Initial escrow deposit for taxes and insurance.
Frequently asked
- What is the property tax rate in Pike County, IN?
- The effective property tax rate in Pike County is 0.78% of home value per year (US Census, ACS 2024 5-year). That is higher than the Indiana average of 0.66% and lower than the national average of 0.92%.
- How much is homeowners insurance in Pike County?
- A typical homeowners policy runs about $1,200 per year (range $780–$1,740) at the Indiana median home value of $243,500. This is a county-adjusted estimate scaled from the NAIC state average; a real quote depends on the home and coverage.
- What are typical closing costs on a $243,500 home in Pike County?
- Estimated buyer closing costs run about $4,481–$7,727 on a $243,500 home — lender fees, title and settlement, the buyer's customary share of transfer and recording taxes, and prepaid taxes and insurance.
- What income do you need to afford the median home in Pike County?
- A household income of about $103,127 per year makes the $243,500 median home here comfortable by our math — housing under about 28% of take-home pay with room left for everyday spending, assuming 20% down at this week's 6.43% 30-year rate.
- What is the all-in monthly cost of the median home in Pike County?
- About $1,958 per month for the $243,500 median home with 20% down at 6.43% — the loan payment, property tax, home insurance, maintenance, and an estimated utilities figure.
Run your own numbers
These figures use the area median and a 20%-down example. Put in your own price, down payment, income, and debts to see whether it’s comfortable for you.
Open the calculator for Pike CountyMore counties in Indiana
Sources & vintages
- Property tax: US Census American Community Survey, county effective rate (ACS 2024 5-year).
- Home insurance: NAIC state average premium (2022 · FEMA NRI December 2025), scaled by FEMA National Risk Index covered-peril risk; range modeled.
- Median home value: US Census, Indiana statewide median owner-occupied value (ACS 2024 1-year) — used as a state-level stand-in for a county median.
- Mortgage rate: Freddie Mac 30-year fixed weekly average via FRED, as of 2026-07-02.
- Transfer taxes & title: researched state/local schedules; utilities and the household baseline are labeled placeholders.
Estimates, not advice, and not a Loan Estimate. Every number is computed from public data or our own math — see the methodology for how, and where the honest gaps are.