Zilwaukee Twp Real Estate
No active listings · 2 sold in the past 12mo
2
Sold (past 12mo)
55
Avg Days on Market
+11.6%
HFGⓘ
Household Formation Gap (HFG) is a secondary market indicator that measures hidden housing demand created by shrinking household sizes. As average household size decreases — due to divorce, single living, empty nesting, delayed marriage — more housing units are needed even without population growth. HFG compares the estimated number of households needed today versus 15 years ago: (population ÷ avg household size). This is a demographic trend signal, not a primary market indicator like income-based affordability or comparative market analysis. Source: U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates (2009–2023), Tables B01003, B25010, B25001.
Market Dashboard
No active listings in Zilwaukee Twp right now.
View 2 recently sold homes →Recently Sold(2)
| Address | Sold Price | Date Sold |
|---|---|---|
| 1671 River Road, Saginaw, MI 48604 | $37,000 | Nov 23, 2025 |
| 6220 N Westervelt Road, Saginaw, MI 48604 | $220,000 | Nov 19, 2025 |
Frequently Asked Questions about Zilwaukee Twp
What is the current real estate inventory in Zilwaukee Twp?
Zilwaukee Twp currently has 0 homes listed for sale.
What school districts serve Zilwaukee Twp?
Multiple school districts may serve Zilwaukee Twp. Michigan school district boundaries are independent of city borders. The school district for a specific property depends on its exact location within the city.
How much are property taxes in Zilwaukee Twp?
Property taxes in Zilwaukee Twp are based on a property's State Equalized Value (SEV), which is roughly 50% of market value, multiplied by the local millage rate. Homestead properties (primary residences) receive a lower rate than non-homestead. Tax bills are split into summer and winter installments.
What is the Household Formation Gap in Zilwaukee Twp?
Based on Census Bureau ACS 5-Year Estimates, the Household Formation Gap in Zilwaukee Twp is +11.6%. Shrinking household sizes (from 2.58 to 2.18 persons per household) have increased the number of households needing housing by 81 since 2009 — independent of the 5.7% population decline. This is a secondary demographic indicator, not a primary market measure.