The New Jersey real estate market is grappling with a persistent shortage of homes, forcing both buyers and sellers to adapt to a more competitive environment. Josette McClaren, a sales asso...
South Jersey's Affordable Housing Market Is Attracting Buyers Priced Out Elsewhere




Tucked between Philadelphia, Wilmington, and the Jersey Shore, South Jersey’s residential market occupies an interesting position heading into the second half of 2026. While national headlines focus on affordability pressures and rate-driven hesitation, conditions on the ground tell a more specific story – one shaped by geography, local pricing dynamics, and growing awareness of what the region offers.
Nancy Casey, a Realtor with BHHS Fox & Roach Mullica Hill South, has spent two decades working this market. Her perspective cuts through much of the noise.
A Market Finding Its Footing
After years of pandemic-era price inflation, South Jersey’s housing market is stabilizing. Prices that were elevated through 2021–2024 are settling back toward levels that reflect actual demand rather than panic buying. That stabilization, however, is playing out unevenly across price points and locations.
Entry-level inventory remains tight, and competition among first-time buyers is still fierce. Casey recently listed a property in the first-time-buyer price range on a Tuesday and received two offers by Friday. “If it’s priced correctly, it will move,” she says.
At higher price points, the picture differs. Sellers holding onto peak-era expectations are finding fewer takers. Above $1 million, the buyer pool narrows considerably, and homes priced based on 2021–2022 conditions are sitting on the market longer. Casey relies on a tight 90-day window of comparable sales rather than looking back six months. “I like to look at what is happening right now, this moment,” she says.
The First-Time Buyer Squeeze
Affordability remains the defining challenge for younger buyers entering the market. Low inventory and multiple-offer situations have made the process longer and more emotionally taxing. Casey’s advice to clients navigating this environment is direct: patience matters, but preparation matters more.
One tool that has proven effective is moving buyers through full underwriting before making an offer, rather than stopping at pre-approval. This means all documentation, income verification, and credit review are complete before a property is even identified – making the offer functionally equivalent to cash in terms of certainty. “Not only are my folks pre-approved, but I’ve already been through underwriting at this price point,” Casey says. “We’re ready to go – appraisal, inspections, all the docs are in.”
When deals do fall apart, it’s rarely a pricing or appraisal issue. In Casey’s experience, inspection disputes are the most common culprit. She hasn’t seen an appraisal kill a deal in some time.
City Versus Suburbs
A geographic divergence worth noting is the gap forming between Philadelphia proper and the surrounding suburban counties. While suburban South Jersey prices have held relatively firm, prices in the city itself are beginning to soften. For buyers with flexibility on location, that gap represents real value on the Philadelphia side of the Delaware River.
The traditional argument that New Jersey’s taxes offset its more affordable home prices no longer holds the way it once did. According to Casey, property taxes in Philadelphia’s suburbs are now roughly in line with what buyers pay in New Jersey – but New Jersey home prices remain lower, meaning buyers get more house for the same monthly cost. “Your house prices in New Jersey, you’re going to get more house for your money,” she says.
Where Investors Should Be Looking
For capital looking to enter the South Jersey market, Casey points to Cumberland and Salem counties as areas worth serious attention. Both are largely agricultural, historically overlooked, and increasingly accessible to major employment centers. Cumberland County alone accounts for roughly 20 percent of New Jersey’s total produce output, and the region sits within a reasonable commute of Philadelphia, Cherry Hill, and Wilmington, Delaware, with easy access to the Jersey Shore.
Towns like Bridgeton, Vineland, and Millville have faced economic headwinds in recent years, but the tone is changing. New businesses, renovated properties, and increased buyer interest suggest early-stage revitalization. “I’m almost seeing a renaissance occurring, and it’s a nice thing to see,” Casey says.
The appeal is partly practical – lower price points, proximity to employment – and partly a reflection of buyer preferences that have held since the pandemic. Buyers relocating from urban areas are drawn to space, land, and a slower pace. Casey notes that many don’t realize New Jersey can offer that combination until they look south of the Turnpike.
Correcting the North Jersey Assumption
One of the most persistent misconceptions about South Jersey is that outsiders conflate the entire state with the densely populated northern corridor. The region Casey covers is defined more by farmland, preserved open space, and quiet residential communities than by the suburban density many associate with New Jersey.
Salem and Cumberland counties contain some of the most protected agricultural land in the state, which limits development pressure and preserves the rural character now attracting a new wave of buyers. “When they think of New Jersey, they tend to think of North Jersey, and that is highly compact in population,” Casey says. “Southwest Jersey is not that at all.”
During the height of the pandemic, the region saw an unusual influx of New York-area buyers – a wave Casey describes as unlike anything she had seen before or since. Today’s migration patterns are more typical, driven by Philadelphia-area residents seeking more space and value without sacrificing access to the city.
What Comes Next
South Jersey’s market has largely shaken off pandemic-era price distortions, but prices – particularly in higher ranges – are still adjusting to what buyers are actually willing to pay today. Entry-level demand remains strong enough to sustain competition, while higher-priced segments are adjusting to a more selective buyer pool. The agricultural counties to the south offer early-stage opportunities for investors willing to look past more established zip codes.
For buyers, the window favors preparation over speed – those who arrive fully underwritten and realistic about pricing are closing deals while others cycle through rejected offers. For investors, the question isn’t whether South Jersey has value, but how long it takes the broader market to recognize what’s already underway in places like Cumberland and Salem counties. The fundamentals – proximity, affordability, and limited development pressure – are unlikely to change. The pricing probably will.
About the Expert: Nancy Casey is a Realtor with BHHS Fox & Roach Mullica Hill South, with two decades of experience serving South Jersey’s residential market.
This article is based on information provided by the expert source cited above. It is intended for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or real estate advice. Readers should conduct their own research and consult qualified professionals before making any real estate or financial decisions.
This article was sourced from a live expert interview.
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