Prineville, Oregon, stands out as the poorest town in the state. Recent analyses from 24/7 Wall Street, focusing on incorporated cities under 25,000 residents, pinpoint its median household income at $29,959—the lowest in Oregon. This Central Oregon hub grapples with economic hurdles far exceeding state averages, highlighting rural poverty’s grip.
Economic Snapshot
Prineville’s poverty stems from a median income dwarfing Oregon’s $70,000+ norm, with under 11% of adults holding bachelor’s degrees versus 30% statewide. Unemployment hovers above national figures, tied to volatile industries like data storage and ranching. Zip Atlas data ranks tiny Shaniko highest at 72.2% poverty, but Prineville leads meaningful towns by income metrics.
Housing costs strain budgets: Median homes at $300,000+ amid low wages force trade-offs. Oregon’s 11.9% poverty rate feels mild here, where families face food insecurity and limited services.
Historical Roots
Founded in 1870 as a ranching outpost, Prineville boomed with timber and cattle before mills shuttered in the 1980s. Crook County’s remoteness—90 miles east of Bend—limits jobs, though data centers (e.g., Facebook) brought 500+ roles since 2010. Boom-bust cycles persist; 2025 wildfires ravaged ranches, spiking aid needs.
Key Challenges
- Education Gap: Low college attainment traps cycles; high school graduation lags.
- Job Scarcity: Agriculture/manufacturing dominate, vulnerable to droughts/recessions.
- Health Access: Rural clinics strain under poverty-linked issues like addiction.
- Infrastructure: Aging roads/schools hinder growth.
| Metric | Prineville | Oregon Avg. | U.S. Avg. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Median Income | $29,959 | ~$70,000 | $74,580 |
| Poverty Rate | ~20% | 11.9% | 12.5% |
| Bachelor’s+ | <11% | 30% | 34% |
| Unemployment | Higher | 4.5% | 4% |
Community Impacts
Poverty hits families hard: 25%+ child rates drive food bank reliance. Schools offer free meals; nonprofits like Family Resource Center aid 1,000+ yearly. Crime edges up with desperation, though community ties buffer.
Signs of Hope
Data centers inject $100M+ taxes, funding roads/schools. Remote work lures amid cheap land ($370K homes). State grants target distressed areas like Prineville (Crook Co.). Youth programs boost skills; tourism (Round-Up) adds seasonal cash.
Comparisons
Unlike college towns like Corvallis (26.4% poverty from students), Prineville’s stems from jobs. Klamath Falls (23%) shares rural woes; urban Portland (12.6%) fares better. Tiny Shaniko’s 72% reflects ghost-town status (pop. 36).
Path Forward
Revival needs broadband, vocational training, diversification. 2026 state budgets prioritize rural equity. Residents praise resilience: “Tight-knit, we help each other.” Prineville embodies Oregon’s divides—challenges forge grit.
SOURCES:
- https://kbnd.com/kbnd-news/local-news-feed/148025
- https://zipatlas.com/us/or/city-comparison/highest-poverty.htm












