Proposals for 50-year mortgage products as housing affordability solutions face skepticism from real estate finance professionals who argue extended terms undermine homeownership’s wea...
What the Jersey Shore TV Show Got Wrong, and What Seaside Heights and Belmar Actually Look Like Now


If you have been avoiding Seaside Heights or Belmar because of what you saw on a reality TV show, you may be working with a very outdated picture. The Jersey Shore aired its last original season years ago, and both towns have changed in ways that would surprise most people who wrote them off.
Carly Ringer, a real estate agent with Keller Williams Realty Spring Lake specializing in the Central Jersey Shore market, says she regularly has to walk buyers through the gap between perception and reality when these towns come up in conversation.
“There are two towns in particular, Belmar and Seaside Heights, where I deal with perceived notions all the time,” she says. “People either want to rush there because they want to be part of the action, or they say keep me away from that town. Both reactions are based on something that has changed considerably.”
What Seaside Heights Looks Like Now
Seaside Heights was the backdrop for most of what viewers saw on the show: the nightclubs, the boardwalk, the party atmosphere along the water. Some of that energy still exists, and for buyers who want that atmosphere, there is still plenty of it.
But the housing market there has moved in a direction no one would have predicted watching the show. Homes that used to sell in the $500,000 range are now being replaced by new construction, pushing $1 million and above. Farm-to-table restaurants have opened. The town is drawing a different buyer than it did a decade ago, and the rental market has followed. Weekly rental rates that used to sit around $2,500 are now closer to $6,000 in some cases.
The people renting and buying in Seaside Heights today are expecting an elevated experience, and the town’s new construction is delivering it. You are more likely to find a five-bedroom home with three balconies than a two-bedroom bungalow filled wall to wall each summer.
What Has Changed in Belmar
Belmar had a similar reputation: a younger crowd, a packed bar scene, small houses used as summer crash pads. That version of Belmar still exists in people’s memories more than it does in the current market.
Many of those small two and three-bedroom houses are gone. After Hurricane Sandy, some were knocked down and never rebuilt in the same form. Others sat until builders came in, demolished what was there, and put up homes in the $1 million to $3 million range. That shift has changed who is buying and renting in Belmar and what the town feels like on a day-to-day basis.
Ringer says she still has clients who are staying away from Belmar without realizing how much it has changed. “I don’t think people understand that it has shifted quite a bit,” she says. “It’s not what it was. Many long-timers miss the small bungalows and charm as change has occurred.”
Why This Matters for Buyers
If you are shopping for a home on the Central Jersey Shore and have been filtering out certain towns based on reputation alone, you may be limiting your options more than you realize. A town’s personality from ten years ago is not necessarily its personality today.
The practical impact is real. Buyers who ruled out Belmar or Seaside Heights based on outdated assumptions have, in some cases, missed homes and price points that would have worked well for them. New construction in both towns is bringing in buyers who would not have considered the area before, and that is pushing values in a direction that makes early attention worthwhile.
The other thing worth understanding is that the Central Jersey Shore is a collection of micro-markets. Two towns sitting two miles apart can feel completely different in terms of lifestyle, noise level, who lives there year-round, and what the beach experience is like. Getting a read on which town actually fits your life is one of the first conversations worth having with a local agent before you start scheduling showings.
For buyers actively looking at homes in this market, you can view current listings across the Central Jersey Shore to get a sense of what is available in different towns and price ranges.
Carly Ringer is a real estate agent with Keller Williams Realty Spring Lake, serving buyers and sellers across the Central Jersey Shore. She brings a background in marketing, economics, and over a decade of entrepreneurship to every transaction.
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.
Disclosure: Individuals or companies mentioned may have a commercial relationship with KeyCrew.
This article was sourced from a live expert interview.
Every month we conduct hundreds of interviews with
active market practitioners - thousands to date.
Similar Articles
Explore similar articles from Our Team of Experts.


Rochester, MN, real estate agent Alex Mayer explains how attraction-based marketing and strategic staffing create more client access than traditional team structures. Large real estate teams...


The ultra-luxury real estate market in Southern California is experiencing what Jeff Biebuyck, founder of Frontgate Real Estate and a top 1% nationally-ranked team leader, calls “a geo...


OneWall Communities’ Donicia Irizarry on why operational consistency is the first casualty of rapid growth – and how to prevent it from taking the whole portfolio down. The multifami...


Christopher Tiessen grew up between two engineering cultures. Now he’s applying what Europe figured out decades ago to some of the most constrained development sites in the United Stat...



