Why We Sold Our House in Enterprise: The Growing Problem Locals Aren’t Talking About

Enterprise, Alabama has always carried that quiet, comfortable charm that makes small Southern cities feel like home. The Boll Weevil Monument, the proximity to Fort Rucker, the modest streets where people wave at strangers. For many families, it is the kind of place you plant roots and never leave. So when people start quietly packing up and moving on, it tends not to make the front page. It does not get loud or dramatic. It just happens.

But something is shifting beneath the surface in Enterprise, and frankly, not enough people are talking about it openly. The pressures building in this community touch everything from housing prices and crime to economic vulnerability and crumbling infrastructure. These are not rumors or complaints from disgruntled newcomers. They are backed by real data. Let’s dive in.

Home Prices Jumped Nearly 30% in a Single Year

Here is a number that should stop you mid-scroll. In November 2025, Enterprise home prices were up nearly 30% compared to the previous year, with homes selling for a median price of $274,000. That kind of spike in a small Alabama city is not normal. It is not a slow, gradual market correction. It is a wall hitting buyers in the face.

On top of that price surge, homes in Enterprise are now sitting on the market for around 60 days on average, compared to just 43 days the prior year. That slowdown tells you buyers are hesitating, maybe even pulling back, unsure whether the price tag is truly worth it. It is the classic sign of a market that has overheated…

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