Quick Answer
Single women are now the second-largest group of homebuyers in the U.S., making up 20% of all purchases according to the NAR’s 2024 Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers — outpacing single men 2.5-to-1. In the Atlanta-to-Athens corridor, communities like Loganville, Monroe, and Jefferson offer entry-level price points where a single-income purchase is genuinely achievable.
The image of the typical homebuyer is changing — and the data backs it up. According to the National Association of REALTORS®, single women made up 20% of all homebuyers in 2024, while single men accounted for just 8%. That’s not a rounding error. That’s a fundamental shift in who’s showing up at the closing table — and it’s playing out right here in Walton, Gwinnett, Barrow, and Oconee counties.
If you’re a single woman thinking about buying your first home — or if you’re already a homeowner thinking about what’s next — this piece is for you. The numbers tell a clear story: solo homeownership is not just possible in this market, it’s happening at record levels.
What Does the National Data Actually Show?
Since 1981, single women have held the #2 spot in homebuyer demographics — behind only married couples. But the gap has widened significantly. When NAR first started tracking this data, single women represented 11% of buyers and single men 10%. Today those numbers stand at 20% and 8%, respectively, per HousingWire’s analysis of the 2024 NAR report.
20%
of all 2024 homebuyers were single women
2.5×
more homes purchased vs. single men
45%
made financial sacrifices to reach homeownership
18%
sold their home in 2024 — they’re staying put
That last number tells its own story. Only 18% of single women homeowners sold in 2024, according to New American Funding. They’re not flipping or trading up quickly — they’re digging in, building equity, and staying for the long haul.
How Are Single Women Making It Work Financially?
It’s not luck — it’s discipline. The median household income for a single female homebuyer in 2024 was $72,500, lower than any other buyer category, yet they’re closing on homes in competitive markets. They’re doing it by budgeting intentionally, often allocating close to 30% of take-home pay toward housing costs, and by making financial sacrifices — cutting back on spending, saving aggressively for down payments, and looking in communities where prices haven’t outrun incomes.
According to This Old House, 41% of single women used the proceeds from a previous home sale for their down payment — suggesting that once they get in the market, they keep leveraging equity to move forward.
Why the Atlanta-to-Athens Corridor Works for Solo Buyers
Here’s the local truth: the stretch of East Georgia running from the outer Gwinnett suburbs through Walton and Barrow counties and into the Athens metro remains one of the more accessible housing markets in the entire state. That matters enormously for a single-income buyer who is being strategic with every dollar.
A few communities worth knowing if you’re doing this solo:
Loganville (Walton/Gwinnett)
One of the corridor’s most consistent entry-level markets. Resale inventory typically starts well under the regional median, and proximity to Hwy 78 keeps commutes manageable. A strong first purchase for a single buyer building toward their first equity milestone.
Monroe (Walton County)
A charming downtown square, slower pace, and home values that remain below the Georgia metro average. Monroe attracts solo buyers who want stability and community feel without the traffic of the inner suburbs. New construction options are also expanding here.
Jefferson (Jackson County)
Jackson County is one of Georgia’s fastest-growing areas — and Jefferson remains one of its more accessible entry points. Highly rated schools, I-85 access, and a growing community make it a strong long-term investment even on a single income.
Winder (Barrow County)
Barrow County has quietly become one of the corridor’s best-kept secrets for affordable single-family homes. Winder offers genuine small-town feel with improving amenities and access to both Atlanta and Athens employment centers.
Snellville (Gwinnett County)
Established neighborhoods, strong schools, and Gwinnett infrastructure — without the price tags of the county’s northern end. Snellville consistently delivers value for buyers who need suburban amenities but are working with a single paycheck.
Social Circle (Walton County)
Some of the most affordable entry points in the corridor, with Walton County charm and easy I-20 access. For a solo buyer stretching their budget, Social Circle can put homeownership within reach when other markets can’t.
Ready to See What’s Available in Your Budget?
Search active listings across the Atlanta-to-Athens corridor — filtered by price, county, and home type.
Search Homes Now →What Does This Mean If You’re Thinking About Buying Solo?
The data doesn’t lie: people are making this work on incomes that aren’t six figures. Here’s how to think about it if you’re in the early stages:
Your income doesn’t have to be massive — your budget does have to be tight.
The median income for single female buyers is around $72,500 nationally. In our corridor, where home prices tend to run below Georgia’s metro averages, that income stretches further. Figure out your ceiling based on a 28–30% housing cost ratio and work backward from there.
Down payment assistance programs exist — and are underused.
Georgia Dream and other state-level programs can meaningfully reduce what you need at closing. FHA loans remain a strong option for first-time buyers. The barrier is often lower than buyers assume.
Pick the right market for where you are right now — not where you wish you were.
Snellville, Loganville, Winder, and Monroe consistently offer more home per dollar than the closer-in Gwinnett suburbs. You don’t need the trendiest zip code to build equity — you need the right price point and a stable neighborhood.
Time in the market is the actual wealth builder.
Widowed homeowners — the most financially secure segment of the single women demographic — have an average tenure of 18 years. The equity they hold didn’t come from timing the market. It came from staying in it. Buy smart, buy what you can afford, and let time do the heavy lifting.
What If You Already Own — and You’re Thinking About What’s Next?
Many single women in our market have been in their homes for years. They bought right, stayed put, and watched equity stack up while life changed around them. If that’s you, the question isn’t whether you have equity — the question is whether you know how much.
Values have moved significantly across Walton, Gwinnett, Barrow, and Oconee counties over the past five years. Understanding what your home is worth right now is the first step to deciding your next move — whether that’s staying, downsizing, upgrading, or cashing out to start fresh somewhere new.
What Is Your Home Worth Today?
Get a real, current market analysis from a local REALTOR® — not an algorithm.
The Bottom Line for East Georgia
The national trend is being played out in our own backyard. Single women are buying homes from Grayson to Dacula to Good Hope. They’re doing it on single incomes, with discipline, and with a long-term plan. They’re not waiting for perfect market conditions. They’re getting in where they fit in and building from there.
If that sounds like your situation — whether you’re ready to make an offer or still six months away from being ready — let’s have a real conversation about what’s possible in this market right now.
Chris Davis
REALTOR® · GA License #327023 · Davis Team at Keller Williams Atlanta Partners
I’ve worked this corridor for years and know where the value is. If you’re a solo buyer trying to figure out how to make the numbers work, call me — that’s exactly the kind of problem I enjoy helping solve.