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City Housing Verdict

Lone Tree, CO

High Pressure

Living in Lone Tree, CO costs about 73% more than the national average (Cost Index: 173). Housing is the main driver — the typical home value of $880,607 is well above the $303,400 US median. The local median household income is $125,699, which helps frame the place-side housing burden.

Lone Tree already reads as a high-pressure housing market, with 19% rent burden, 7x home-price-to-income, and a housing index of 290. Treat this page as a stress test for rent, mortgage, and tax burden before assuming the move works.Data Sources: U.S. Census Bureau ACS 2023 · BEA RPP 2023 · Zillow ZHVI

Data Updated: March 2026
Housing Feasibility Verdict
Stretch

Based on your household income, housing mode, local rent, home value, property tax, and mortgage assumptions for Lone Tree.

Monthly Housing
$2,030/mo
Lower of rent or buy scenario
Housing Burden
19%
Healthy
Residual Cash
$7,945/mo
After housing and debt · $2,648/person
Rent vs Buy
Rent first
Main pressure: everyday costs
Assumptions
Housing Mode
Confidence: MediumHome source: ZILLOWRent source: ACSBEA proxy: msaHousehold size: 3Down payment: 20%Fixed burden: 24%
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Cost Index
173
Very Expensive
Based on housing costs · See methodology
Median Home Value
$880,607
Zillow ZHVI Market Rate • Census ACS: $819,800
National: $303,400
Median Rent
$2,030/mo
Source: Census ACS
National: $1,348/mo
Household Income
$125,699
National: $78,538
Population
14,136
Purchasing Power
93
100 = national baseline

Cost of Living Breakdown

Each index uses 100 as the US national average. A score of 150 means 50% more expensive; 80 means 20% cheaper.

Housing Cost Index
290 / 100
~2.9x more expensive
Rent Index
151 / 100
51% above average
Goods & Groceries
101 / 100
About the same as most US cities
Utilities
88 / 100
12% lower utility bills
Healthcare & Services
99 / 100
In line with national average
Overall Index
173
Very Expensive · 73% above average

Lone Tree Mortgage Calculator

Pre-filled with the local median home value of $880,607 and Colorado's property tax rate of 0.51%.

Household Housing Budget

Local median household income is shown only as a place-side affordability input. Personal salary, filing status, and take-home pay analysis belong in salary.city.

Local Household Income
$125,699
Census ACS place context
Rent Burden Estimate
19%
Typical annual rent / local household income
Home Price to Income
7x
Typical home value / local household income
Use this section to judge whether Lone Tree looks structurally manageable for a household budget. For a specific job offer, filing status, payroll taxes, or salary equivalence across cities, run the income-side decision in salary.city.

Property Tax in Lone Tree, CO

Est. Annual Property Tax
$4,491
Monthly Impact
$374
Added to your mortgage
Effective Rate
0.51%
National avg: ~1.00%

Colorado Place Tax Context

Tax TypeColoradoNational Avg
Property Tax Rate0.51%1.00%
Top Income Tax Rate4.4%~5.0%
State Sales Tax7.79%~5.0%

Compare Lone Tree to Another City

Compare place-side costs such as housing, rent, groceries, utilities, services, and tax context.

Cost of Living Comparison

Compare place-side housing, rent, goods, services, and utility pressure between cities.

Lone Tree, CO
173
151
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Cost Index Comparison (100 = National Avg)

Housing CostsNational Avg: 100
Lone Tree, CO: 290
Rent Prices
151

FAQ: Living in Lone Tree

Is Lone Tree, CO an expensive place to live?+

Yes — Lone Tree is about 73% more expensive than the national average, with an overall Cost Index of 173. Housing is the biggest factor: the typical home here is valued around $880,607, and monthly rents average roughly $2,030. Day-to-day costs like groceries and utilities tend to run closer to the national norm.

How does Lone Tree fit a household housing budget?+

Start with housing. Typical monthly rent is $2,030, while local median household income is $125,699. That implies a rent-burden proxy of about 19% before utilities and other costs. For a specific job offer, filing status, or take-home pay scenario, use salary.city.

How much are taxes in Lone Tree, CO?+

Colorado has a progressive state income tax with a top rate of 4.4%. The effective property tax rate is 0.51%. On a home worth $880,607, that translates to roughly $4,491 per year in property taxes. Sales tax (state + local) averages around 7.79% on everyday purchases.

How much does it cost to rent in Lone Tree, CO?+

The typical monthly rent in Lone Tree is around $2,030. That's about 51% higher than the $1,348 national median. For comparison, the median home value here is $880,607, so buyers should also factor in mortgage payments, property taxes, and insurance.

How much does a house cost in Lone Tree, CO?+

The median home in Lone Tree is valued at $880,607. With 20% down and a 6.5% mortgage rate, you'd be looking at roughly $4,453/month for principal and interest alone — before property taxes and insurance. About 56% of residents here own their homes.

Are groceries and utilities expensive in Lone Tree?+

Grocery prices in Lone Tree are about average compared to the rest of the US (index: 101, where 100 is the national average). Utility bills (electricity, gas, water) are below average (index: 88). Overall, these everyday costs shouldn't cause major surprises if you're moving from another similarly-sized US city.

What is Lone Tree, CO like to live in?+

Lone Tree is a small town with a population of about 14,136. The median age of residents is 41.1, which is close to the national median. The local poverty rate is 4.59%, well below the national average of 12.4%.

Lower-Pressure Alternatives in Colorado

If Lone Tree feels tight, start with these same-state cities that look easier on rent burden or buy-side pressure.

Higher-Pressure Comparisons in Colorado

Use these city pages when you want to compare Lone Tree against tougher same-state markets before deciding whether the current city is already a stretch.

LC
Reviewed by LivabilityCalc Research Team
Financial Data Analysts · Census & Economic Data Specialists
Data Sources & Methodology
  • Real Estate & Housing: Zillow Home Value Index (ZHVI, Smoothed & Seasonally Adjusted) and Zillow Observed Rent Index (ZORI). Structural fallback utilizes U.S. Census Bureau ACS 5-Year Estimates.
  • Goods, Utilities & Services: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) Metropolitan Area Regional Price Parities (MARPP), incorporating verified State Nonmetropolitan averages.
  • Mortgage Rates: Freddie Mac 30-Year Fixed Rate Mortgage Average in the United States (PMMS) via Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED).
  • Tax Context: State-level property, sales, and income-tax context used for place-side relocation planning. Personal take-home pay and offer analysis are handled by salary.city.
  • Index Methodology: Weighting matrix derived from Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) Consumer Expenditure Surveys (CEX) distributional models. Baseline standardized at 100. (Read methodology details)
Last data update: March 2026 · Mortgage rates updated monthly