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What's Selling Fast in South Jersey (And What's Just Sitting There)




Walk through an open house in South Jersey right now, and you might notice something strange. One home down the street has a sold sign after a single weekend. Another, just a few blocks away, has been sitting for weeks with a price cut and no takers. Same market. Totally different stories.
The split comes down to a clear pattern that real estate professionals in Burlington and Camden Counties are watching closely, and if you’re buying or selling, it’s worth understanding before you make your next move.
The Market Is Splitting in Two
With mortgage rates hovering around 6%, South Jersey’s housing market has fractured along price lines. Homes priced under $400,000 and those above $750,000 are moving quickly when they’re in solid condition. Everything in between is a different story.
Lina Siciliano, a licensed broker with Real Broker, LLC, who has spent over a decade working in South Jersey, sees the divide clearly. “Under that $400,000-ish mark and then above $750,000, those tend to go off quicker,” she says. “The ones in the middle, that $400,000 to $600,000 range, that’s where you’re seeing things get a little stagnant.”
Buyers shopping in that middle range are the most rate-sensitive. Many locked in 2% or 3% mortgages a few years ago and are now wrestling with whether upgrading to a larger home is worth taking on a 6% rate. That hesitation shows up in longer days on market and fewer competing offers.
What’s Hot Right Now: Move-in-ready homes under $400,000 are the clearest winners. First-time buyers, downsizers, and people relocating from Philadelphia, where the same money buys significantly less house, are all competing for these listings. Sellers in this range are still seeing healthy demand and multiple offers.
At the higher end, updated homes priced above $750,000 in desirable areas are also performing well, but only when they’re in good shape. Buyers spending that kind of money are not interested in projects. They want quality, and they’re willing to pay for it.
Location is doing heavy lifting, too. Marlton, Medford, and Medford Lakes in Burlington County consistently rank among the most in-demand areas, largely because of strong school districts. Cinnaminson has also risen significantly in popularity. “There’s always that correlation with school districts,” Siciliano notes. Homes in these towns tend to attract more interest and sell faster than comparable properties in less sought-after zip codes.
What’s Sitting
The homes struggling most right now occupy a frustrating middle ground, not fully updated, but not cheap enough to attract investors either. Buyers today are pickier than they were two or three years ago, and they’re not willing to overpay for a home that needs work.
During the pandemic, condition barely mattered. “A house could be falling apart,t and people were still willing to pay top dollar,” Siciliano says. That’s no longer the case. A home that needs a new kitchen, dated bathrooms, or major mechanical updates is going to sit, especially if the seller is pricing it as though it’s competition-ready.
Street-level factors matter more than sellers often expect, too. Siciliano mentioned one of her own listings, a well-maintained 2012-built home in Cherry Hill, that drew less traffic than expected, largely because of its specific road location. Even a strong house can underperform if the setting doesn’t feel right to buyers.
What Buyers and Sellers Should Do
For buyers under $400,000: Be ready to move. These homes are still competitive, and hesitating can mean losing out. Get pre-approved before you start touring, and know your number before you walk in the door.
For buyers in the $400,000 to $600,000 range: You have more leverage than you did two years ago. Homes are sitting on the market g longer, and sellers are more open to negotiating price or offering repair credits. Don’t be afraid to ask.
For sellers: Condition is the deciding factor right now. If your home is updated and priced right, you can still expect solid interest. If it needs work, price it accordingly from day one – or offer a credit so buyers don’t have to imagine the renovation themselves. Overpricing and then dropping later is the slowest, most painful path to a sale.
For small investors: The MLS is competitive even for distressed properties, because other investors are watching too. Off-market opportunities, pre-foreclosures, and short sales are worth exploring if you’re looking for real upside.
Looking Ahead
South Jersey’s market isn’t broken; it’s more selective than it was a few years ago. The homes that check the right boxes on price, condition, and location are still selling well. Everything else requires more patience, smarter pricing, and a realistic read on what buyers actually want.
If rates drop meaningfully, the frozen middle segment, those move-up buyers sitting on low-rate mortgages, could unlock quickly, bringing renewed competition to the $400,000 to $600,000 range. Until then, expect the two-speed market to persist, rewarding preparation on both sides of the transaction.
About the Expert: Lina Siciliano is a licensed broker with Real Broker, LLC and has spent over a decade working in South Jersey’s residential market.
This article is intended for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or investment advice. The views and opinions expressed herein reflect those of the individuals quoted and do not represent an endorsement of any company, product, or service mentioned. Readers should conduct their own due diligence and consult qualified professionals before making any investment decisions.
This article was sourced from a live expert interview.
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