ExecutivePulse
Official Federal Data

Warren County, North Carolina

FIPS 37185 · Population 18,795
9 Sources Updated June 22, 2026
$50,638
Median Income
$80,734 national
4.9%
Unemployment
4% national
$407M
GDP
18.9%
Bachelor's+
35.7% national
Small population: 18,795 residents. These figures come from the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey 5-year estimates, which carry a wide margin of error for places under 20,000 people. Read each value as an approximate range, and treat year-over-year changes as indicative rather than exact. A small shift can reflect survey sampling, not a real change on the ground.

Demographics & Population

Census Bureau American Community Survey 2020-2024 · 5-Year Estimates

Household Income

Source: U.S. Census Bureau · American Community Survey 2020-2024 5-Year Estimates
Median Household
$50,638
Per Capita
$33,126
Mean Household
$74,977
Poverty Rate
21.1% approx.
Median Income Comparison
Warren County$50,638
North Carolina$72,388
National$80,734

Population Profile

Source: Census Bureau ACS 2020-2024 · Tables B01001, B02001, B03003
65+: 27.7% (5,212 residents) 55-64: 16% (3,012 residents) 35-54: 21.7% (4,077 residents) 18-34: 16.9% (3,173 residents) Under 18: 17.7% (3,321 residents) 50 Median Age
Cohorts
Under 18 · 17.7%
18-34 · 16.9%
35-54 · 21.7%
55-64 · 16%
65+ · 27.7%
Race & Ethnicity
White38.4%
Black or African American47.3%
Asian0.1%
Hispanic or Latino(any race)4.7%
Hispanic or Latino is an ethnic category and overlaps with the race categories above.

Educational Attainment

Source: Census Bureau ACS 2020-2024 · Table B15003 · Population 25+
84.2%
High School+
National: 89.6%
▼ 5.4 pts
18.9%
Bachelor's+
National: 35.7%
▼ 16.8 pts
6.5%
Graduate+
National: 14.1%
▼ 7.6 pts

Employment Overview

Source: U.S. Census Bureau · American Community Survey 2020-2024 5-Year Estimates
18,795
Population
7,928
Labor Force
Employed
7,357
Unemployment Rate BLS LAUS 2025 annual
4.9% ▲ +0.2 pts YoY
Mean Commute 3 min above national avg
29.5 min
Work From Home vs 15.1% national
11%
Key Takeaways
  • Income gap: Households earn meaningfully less than the national median, which directly affects retail demand, housing absorption, and tax base.
  • Elevated poverty: At 21.1%, the rate is in economically distressed territory and supports federal funding narratives (CDFI, NMTC, EDA).
  • Talent gap: Bachelor's-or-higher attainment trails the national average by 16.8 pts, relevant for advanced-services attraction strategy.
  • Aging population: Median age of 50 is materially above the U.S. norm; succession planning and senior-services demand are real factors.

Economy & Industry

Bureau of Labor Statistics QCEW · Bureau of Economic Analysis

$407M
Gross Domestic Product · 2024
Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis · CAGDP1 Regional GDP

Top Industries by Employment

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics · Quarterly Census of Employment & Wages 2025 Annual
Top industries by employment in Warren County, North Carolina, with employment, share of top sectors, and average wage
IndustryEmploymentShare of Top 10Avg Wage
1Manufacturing
476 27.6%
$46,792
2Retail Trade
390 22.6%
$26,471
3Accommodation and Food Services
276 16.0%
$22,151
4Construction
120 7.0%
$52,031
5Health Care and Social Assistance
108 6.3%
$37,601
6Agriculture, Forestry, Fishing and Hunting
102 5.9%
$53,650
7Administrative and Support and Waste Management
101 5.9%
$48,134
8Professional, Scientific, and Technical Services
60 3.5%
$67,704
9Transportation and Warehousing
50 2.9%
$50,586
10Finance and Insurance
40 2.3%
$49,941
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Key Takeaways
  • Largest sector: Manufacturing employs 476 workers (27.6% of tracked sectors), at an average wage of $46,792.
  • Economic scale: Regional GDP of $407M (2024).
  • Wage stratification: Professional, Scientific, and Technical Services averages $67,704 while Accommodation and Food Services averages $22,151, a 3.1x spread in the same local economy, with implications for workforce development and talent strategy.
Source: BLS QCEW + BEA Regional GDP.
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EP customers get year-over-year deltas, WARN notices, and SEC filings for every sector tracked above, surfaced as proactive alerts, not after-the-fact news.

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Industry Concentration

Location Quotient measures regional specialization vs. national average. LQ > 1.0 = concentrated.

Location Quotient Analysis

Concentrated Industries
Source: BLS QCEW · 3-digit NAICS sub-sector · Location Quotient vs. national employment share
Same source as the Top Industries table above, sub-sector view surfaces the specialization the supersector view masks (e.g., Plastics & Rubber Manufacturing inside the Manufacturing supersector).
Forestry and Logging
67.61x
58
Wood Product Manufacturing
14.61x
110
Animal Production and Aquaculture
4.35x
22
Crop Production
2.22x
22
Truck Transportation
1.80x
50
Gasoline Stations and Fuel Dealers
1.78x
35
1.65x
698
Personal and Laundry Services
1.55x
46
Building Material and Garden Supply Retailers
1.52x
39

Cluster Depth

Source: BLS QCEW · Sub-sectors with LQ ≥ 1.5 indicate genuine cluster concentration
Dominant Cluster
Goods-Producing Cluster
Coherent grouping of concentrated sub-sectors, signals supply-chain fit for site selectors
698
Cluster Employment
1.65x
Peak LQ
Concentrated Sub-Sectors
Forestry and Logging
67.61x 58
Wood Product Manufacturing
14.61x 110
Animal Production and Aquaculture
4.35x 22
Crop Production
2.22x 22
Truck Transportation
1.80x 50
Gasoline Stations and Fuel Dealers
1.78x 35
1.65x 698
Personal and Laundry Services
1.55x 46
Building Material and Garden Supply Retailers
1.52x 39

Attraction Opportunities

LQ < 0.5 with ≥ 50 employed, realistic diversification targets. Source: BLS QCEW
0.30x
Professional, Scientific, and Technical Services
60 employed
Key Takeaways
  • Top specialization: Forestry and Logging concentrates at 67.61x the national norm, top-decile concentration, the kind of signature sector that defines a region's economic identity to site selectors.
  • Cluster depth: 9 sub-sectors register LQ ≥ 1.5, suggesting an interconnected industrial base rather than reliance on a single employer or sector.
  • Attraction whitespace: 6 sub-sectors register LQ < 0.5, candidates for diversification or recruitment depending on labor-market fit.
Source: BLS QCEW sub-sector Location Quotients.
Warren County's Top Sectors by Workforce Share
Each rectangle's area is proportional to that sector's share of total private-sector employment across all NAICS supersectors. Hover for exact employment.
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics QCEW 2025 Annual · Private sector, NAICS supersectors

Housing & Affordability

Census ACS · HUD Fair Market Rents FY2026

Housing Overview

Source: Census Bureau ACS 2020-2024 5-Year Estimates · Tables B25001, B25077, B25064
$154,200
Median Home Value vs 2019
$790
Rent/Mo
69.4%
Owner-Occ
30.5%
Vacancy
3.0x
Home Value to Income Ratio
vs. ~4.1x national average

HUD Fair Market Rents

Source: HUD · Fair Market Rents FY2026
Studio
$700/mo
1 Bedroom
$705/mo
2 Bedroom
$925/mo
3 Bedroom
$1,172/mo
4 Bedroom
$1,239/mo
30% of monthly median household income (~$1,266/mo) · rents above this line are typically considered cost-burdened.
Key Takeaways
  • In line with national: Home value to income ratio of 3.0x sits near the ~4.1x national average; affordability is neither a clear advantage nor a recruitment friction.
  • Elevated vacancy: 30.5% vacancy rate. In resort, rural, and seasonal markets much of this is recreational/seasonal (second homes), not available supply; confirm the vacancy-by-reason split before treating it as a redevelopment opportunity.
  • Broadly affordable rents: All 5 HUD Fair Market Rent bedroom tiers sit below the 30%-of-median-income affordability threshold (~$1,266/mo), a clear cost-of-living advantage for workforce attraction.
Source: Census ACS housing tables + HUD Fair Market Rents.

Workforce Pipeline

Labor force readiness, commuting, and workforce composition

Labor Market Overview

Source: Census ACS 2020-2024 · Tables B01001, B23025, B08303, B08301
10,262
Working Age (18-64) vs 2019
Mean Commute 3 min above national avg
29.5 min
Work From Home vs 15.1% national
11%
Prime-Age Employed (25-54)
73.1%
of prime-age population
Labor force participation rate: 51.2% of working-age population (18-64) 51% Participation
▲ vs 2019

Education & Talent Pipeline

Source: Census ACS 2020-2024 · Table B15003 · College Scorecard
Bachelor's+
18.9%
HS Diploma+
84.2%
Regional / Statewide Institutions
Total credentials awarded
47,592/yr
North Carolina State University at Raleigh 10,279/yr
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 9,997/yr
University of North Carolina at Charlotte 8,666/yr
East Carolina University 6,984/yr
Wake Technical Community College 6,278/yr
Appalachian State University 5,388/yr

Aging Workforce

Source: Census Bureau ACS · Derived from age & employment tables
29.4%
55-64 of working-age population (18-64)
Elevated retirement risk, above the 20% threshold. Succession planning recommended.

Workforce by Occupation

Source: Census ACS 2020-2024 · Table C24010 · Civilian employed population 16+
Management / Professional
29.8%
Service
18%
Sales & Office
21.2%
Construction / Maint.
9.6%
Production / Transport
21.4%
Bars scaled 2× for visual differentiation; percentage labels show actual share of 7,357 employed workers.
Key Takeaways
  • Succession risk is real: 29.4% of working-age residents are 55-64. Plan for retirements over the next decade and pair attraction strategy with talent retention.
  • Low participation: 51.2% labor force participation suggests untapped capacity; workforce development programs may unlock supply.
  • Talent pipeline: 6 regional institutions feed the workforce; the top three combined produce 28,942 annual credentials.
Source: ACS workforce data and College Scorecard.

AI Insights

AI-assisted analysis, drawn from 9 federal data sources

Sample AI Insight

Warren County shows strong potential for forestry and logging attraction, with a 67.61x concentration and 58 jobs in this sub-sector. It ranks in the top decile nationally. Near-term succession risk is elevated, with 29.4% of the working-age population within 10 years of retirement age.

The interconnected base across forestry and logging, wood product manufacturing, and animal production and aquaculture creates supply-chain attraction leverage rather than single-employer risk, a structural advantage for industrial recruitment.

Industry Shift Analysis

Manufacturing Automation Risk
High
Healthcare Growth Forecast
+4.2% CAGR
Remote Work Migration
67/100

Prospect Match Scores

Advanced Manufacturing
92/100
Life Sciences
84/100
Data Centers
71/100
Illustrative example

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Data Sources

Updated from official federal government data.

Census ACS 5-Year2024
BLS QCEW2025 annual
BLS LAUS (via FRED)2025 annual
BEA Regional GDP2024
Census CBP2023
HUD Fair Market RentsFY2026
FCC Broadband Map2024
USAspending.govFY2026
College ScorecardAY 2022-23

Frequently Asked Questions

Key economic and demographic figures for Warren County, North Carolina, from federal data sources.

What is the population of Warren County, North Carolina?

18,795 (U.S. Census Bureau, ACS 5-Year Estimates).

What is the median household income in Warren County, North Carolina?

$50,638 (U.S. Census Bureau, ACS 5-Year Estimates).

What is the unemployment rate in Warren County, North Carolina?

4.9% (2025 annual average, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, LAUS).

What is the GDP of Warren County, North Carolina?

$407M (U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, CAGDP1).