Residential real estate prices in South Jersey near Philadelphia seem to be continuing a steady comeback – at least in some areas.
Gregg Rego at City Abstract, a title company in Cherry Hill, calls the areas “hot pockets.”
He mentioned the Haddons – Haddon Township, Haddon Heights and Haddonfield – in particular.
- OTHER SOUTH JERSEY STORIES
- Paying respects: When the mob paid it respects to Kellyanne Conway's grandfather
- Proposed $9 million settlement for faulty tallies by TD bank coin counting machines
- New Jersey on fast-track to legalize recreational pot in 2018
All three Camden County towns have strong schools and are on or near the PATCO rail line, making them attractive to young families, especially those who work in Philadelphia but want to live in the suburbs.
In all of those towns, interested buyers outnumber available inventory, he said.
Moorestown, in Burlington County, further from Philadelphia and off the PATCO line, has also maintained a steady interest from buyers, said Rego, even though homes there are priced much higher than most residences in the region. But buyers looking for larger lots and good schools are drawn to Moorestown, added Rego.
Some other towns – he pointed to Cherry Hill as one – are not drawing the same degree of interest from buyers.
But in the "hot pockets," multiple offers on homes are driving sale prices above listing prices, said Rego, who expected to close between 30 and 40 sales over the holiday weekend.
'IT'S INSANE'
As an example of buyer interest, a property on Burrwood Avenue in the Bluebird section of Haddon Township was listed at $399,000 sold on June 26 for $420,000. There were multiple offers on the property.
The 1924 home with three bedrooms and 2.5 baths and 2,300 square feet sold for slightly more than 5 percent above its asking price even though it was already priced well above the value of neighboring homes.
Zillow, the listing service, had estimated it would sell for only $388,727. Just six years ago, it had sold for only $325,000.
More Millennials are home-hunting after sitting on the sidelines, and they want "move-in ready" homes, says Nick Mink, mortgage manager
The listing agent for the property, John Kennedy of Coldwell Banker in Haddonfield, said the sale showed the strength of the so-called “Spring Selling Season,” which in the real estate industry runs until the end of June.
He said the home was on the market just two days and there were eight offers made, a trend he is seeing more frequently in Haddon Township and Haddonfield.
Nick Mink, a manager for Guaranteed Rate mortgages in Haddon Township and Philadelphia, said the close of the spring real estate season, combined with tight inventories, have pushed fence-sitters into the market.
“It’s insane,” he said.
He’s aware of several bidding battles which ended with “best and final offers,” a term he’s not heard since before the real estate bubble burst in 2008.
And he’s finally seeing more Millennials applying for mortgages after delaying home purchases for several years.
“They have credit, jobs, but it takes time,” said Mink.
Millennials tended to want “move-in-ready” homes, rather than projects, added Mink, putting still more pressure on desirable inventory in the hotter towns.