Tract 01097006202 Eviction Risk: Lower
Tract 01097006202 · Mobile County, AL · pop 2,095
In Mobile, census tract 01097006202 scores 4.8/10 for eviction risk. It lands near the 33rd percentile nationally for landlord eviction risk.
About 74% of renters carry a rent burden of 30% of income or higher, a severe level, and 63% are severely burdened at 50% or more. Average gross rent is $968 monthly, set against $100,000 in average yearly household income, roughly 12% of income at the averages. Renters make up 14% of occupied homes.
Percentile rank
Higher percentile = riskier than more peers.Risk heat across Mobile County and the region
Centroid at 30.8008, -88.3760 · click any tract to drill in
Why Tract 01097006202 scores 2.6
9 axes · 1 = landlord-friendlyHow Tract 01097006202 compares
Risk score vs. parent city, county, state.SVI percentile: 18
CDC/ATSDR 2022. Higher = more vulnerable. National percentile across 84k tracts.
- 30%Socioeconomic
- 10%Household composition
- 16%Racial/ethnic minority
- 32%Housing & transportation
Census tracts with similar eviction risk
Closest by Eviction Risk Score.
Eviction-adjacent indicators
Crude prevalence of conditions linked to housing loss. Source: CDC PLACES (cwsq-ngmh), 2023 model-based small-area estimates.
- 11.1%Housing insecurity
- 7.1%Utility-shutoff threat
- 15.7%Food insecurity
- 10.4%SNAP enrollment
- 8.0%Transit barriers
- 9.2%No health insurance
- 17.3%Frequent mental distress
- 34.2%Any disability
What drives eviction risk in Tract 01097006202
The heaviest input here is eviction process difficulty at $1/10. That part comes from the wider legal climate rather than the tract itself. Statewide and court-level factors such as eviction-process speed and rent-control exposure are set by Alabama eviction laws law, while the economic and supply signals are measured at the tract level.
Set against its neighbors, this tract scores about the same as the Mobile County average of 4.9 and in line with the Alabama statewide average of 4.5. Within its own county it reads on the safer side for landlords.
The tract is predominantly White and ranks around the 18th percentile nationally on the CDC Social Vulnerability Index, a measure of how exposed residents are to housing and economic shocks. That is a relatively low-vulnerability reading.
In CDC survey modeling, about 11.1% of adults here said they could not pay rent or mortgage at some point in the past year, and 7.1% faced a utility shutoff threat, a common early warning before a filing.
For a landlord, conditions here are middle-of-the-road. Standard screening and prompt, documented notices usually keep cases short.