Holmes County property transfers show June sales across the county
A 1-acre Legacy Ridge Drive lot sold for $100,000, while a Berlin Township property brought $287,500, showing a wide June price spread in Holmes County.

Recorded transfers filed with the Holmes County Auditor between June 4 and June 11 spanned a $40,000-to-$600,000 market across Holmes and Wayne counties, with two Holmes County sales landing on very different ends of the local price picture. A 1.00-acre parcel on Legacy Ridge Drive Lot 5 sold for $100,000, while 5488 S. Market St., Lot 22, in Berlin Township changed hands for $287,500.
The Legacy Ridge transaction moved from Anderson Safe Properties Ltd. to Philip C. Tieszen, Trustee, and Laci C. Tieszen, Trustee, as trustees of the Tieszen Family Trust dated Sept. 17, 2025. The Berlin Township property sold from Winifred R. Huprich to Eddie A. Kline and Lisa E. Kline, adding another higher-value transfer to a corridor where residential and mixed-use demand has stayed visible.
Those deeds matter because Holmes County keeps the paper trail open. The county auditor’s parcel-search system includes value history and tax-card information, the Recorder’s Office maintains deeds and other land records, and the county GIS transfer history lets residents trace parcel sales through searchable records and PDFs. That makes each transfer more than a single closing; it becomes part of the county’s running record on land use and value.

The latest sales also fit a broader pattern. A June 2022 roundup included a Berlin Township sale on Somerset Drive for $719,985 and an Anderson Safe Properties transfer on Legacy Ridge for $115,200, showing that the same areas have drawn repeated interest over several years. A March 14, 2026 county transfer roundup ran from $28,000 to $1.9 million, underscoring how wide the spread can be when Holmes and Wayne county sales are lined up together.
For Holmes County, that spread is a useful signal. Sales in places such as Berlin Township, along with continuing records around Millersburg and Walnut Creek, feed into tax values, housing availability and the pace at which acreage moves into new ownership. Even a small number of recorded deeds can show where money is flowing, and the June transfers suggest buyers are still active at both modest and midrange price points.
This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.
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