Connecticut’s residential real estate market faces one of its worst inventory shortages in decades. The primary cause is homeowners’ unwillingness to give up the low mortgage rat...
New Jersey Shore Housing Market Cools as Buyer Competition Falls




Buyer activity in New Jersey shore communities has declined sharply over the past four years. Properties that once attracted 20 to 30 competing offers now typically receive only two or three serious bids. Steven Kozusko, a Realtor with CENTURY 21 Thomson & Co., says this steep drop in competition is changing how deals are made and forcing both agents and sellers to reset expectations shaped by the pandemic boom.
“Four years ago, we were getting 20 to 30 buyers per house. Now we get maybe two or three,” Kozusko says. The bidding wars that once defined the market have mostly disappeared, replaced by a new reality where even one qualified offer carries weight.
Sellers Struggle to Accept the Market Shift
Despite this dramatic shift, many sellers are reluctant to accept that the market has changed. Kozusko observes that sellers remain “a little bit stubborn,” holding onto the belief that they have the same negotiating power they did when interest rates were at record lows.
Many sellers still expect multiple strong offers and are slow to recognize that a good offer, when it arrives, deserves serious consideration because another may not follow. This gap between seller expectations and current conditions is creating friction. Homes priced too aggressively, or those where reasonable offers were rejected, are sitting longer on the market. Any subsequent offer, if it comes at all, may be less attractive. The seller’s market mindset persists, even as the data point to a clear slowdown.
How Buyers Can Gain an Edge in a Slower Market
For buyers who understand the new dynamics, this environment presents a real opportunity. Kozusko describes a recent case involving first-time buyers who faced four competing offers. By using an escalation clause, an approach the other agents did not attempt, he secured the home for his clients at about $10,000 below their maximum budget.
An escalation clause lets buyers outbid competitors without revealing their top price. Kozusko also advised his clients to minimize inspection contingencies and waive the appraisal after arranging a pre-appraisal, making the offer more attractive to the seller. These tactics carry more weight now than during the peak of the buying frenzy. With fewer bids per property, the structure and presentation of an offer can determine its success. Agents who pay attention to these details are helping clients succeed in a market where financing alone is no longer enough.
Reduced Competition Is Slowing Market Activity
The falloff in buyer competition is affecting market liquidity. With fewer buyers per listing, transactions take longer to close, and deals are more likely to fall apart. Sellers who might have listed in a more active market are staying put, further reducing inventory. This cycle of low buyer and seller activity is contributing to the market’s current stagnation.
Kozusko notes that a recent drop in interest rates below 6 percent could bring more buyers into the market, but he does not expect a return to conditions seen four years ago. Many homeowners remain locked into low-rate mortgages, limiting new listings even as affordability improves slightly.
Navigating the New Normal at the Jersey Shore
Both buyers and sellers must now adjust their strategies. Buyers need to act decisively when they find the right property, recognizing that fewer homes are available and that strong offers matter. Sellers must accept that the leverage they held during the pandemic has faded and that waiting for multiple competing offers is no longer realistic.
Agents who can guide clients through these changes, helping sellers set realistic prices and buyers structure competitive offers, are the ones closing deals as overall transaction volume remains low. The New Jersey shore market is no longer defined by bidding wars. Careful negotiation and a clear understanding of today’s conditions are what determine who succeeds.
This article was sourced from a live expert interview.
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