Hudson County, NJ
Property Data

Explore accurate parcel and ownership records,
directly sourced from county assessors.

Total Properties

173,856

Average Home Price

$739,015

Average Square Feet

1,857

Price per Sq Ft

$461

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
2623,511

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

173,856

Median Home Price

$650,000

Average Home Price

$739,015

Average Square Feet

1,857

Price per Sq Ft

$461

Recent Sales (12mo)

2,431

YoY Price Change

1.4%

Sales Velocity

43.2%

Hudson County, NJ: Manhattan's Shadow Market — and One of the Most Unequal Places in America

Hudson County doesn't operate like a typical New Jersey suburb. It operates like a second Manhattan — absorbing the overflow of one of the world's most expensive real estate markets while developing a distinct identity of its own. Jersey City, Hoboken, Bayonne, Weehawken: these are not bedroom communities so much as urban neighborhoods that happen to sit west of the Hudson River. That dynamic explains almost everything interesting in this data.

Start with the Gini Index: 0.501. That figure places Hudson County in the company of some of the most economically stratified places in the developed world. The national average hovers around 0.47 — already high by international standards — but Hudson County exceeds it meaningfully. Walk six blocks in Jersey City and you'll pass a luxury high-rise with Manhattan skyline views and a family on SNAP benefits. Both are operating rationally within the same market. That tension is Hudson County's defining reality.

A Renter's County in Every Sense

Only 31.2% of Hudson County residents own their homes — roughly half the national homeownership rate and dramatically below New Jersey's statewide figure of around 64%. This isn't a story of people unable to achieve ownership; it's a structural feature of a dense, transit-connected urban county where multifamily buildings dominate the housing stock. Just 9.4% of properties are single-family homes. The median home was built in 1955, and the bones of the housing market are brownstones and mid-century apartment blocks, not cul-de-sacs.

But renters are paying dearly. A median rent of $1,811 — well above national norms — combined with a rent burden rate of 44.1% tells the story of a county where even moderate-income households are financially squeezed. More than one in five renter households (22.2%) face severe rent burden, spending over half their income on housing.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$650,0002.0x the national median home value
Homeownership Rate31.2%Less than half New Jersey's ~64% state average
Rent Burden Rate44.1%Far above the 30% threshold; severe burden affects 22.2%
Gini Index0.501Among the highest inequality readings of any U.S. county

The Transit-and-Density Equation

Hudson County's commute profile is unlike almost anywhere else in New Jersey: 32.2% of residents use public transit, and 25.8% have no vehicle at all. Only 34% drive alone — a figure more typical of Brooklyn than Bergen County. This is what genuine urban density looks like, and it explains the premium baked into every square foot here. At $473 per square foot, buyers are paying for proximity, walkability, and PATH train access — not square footage. The average transaction clocks in at just 1,437 square feet.

The 18.3% work-from-home rate, elevated even post-pandemic, suggests a knowledge-worker class that chose Hudson County for lifestyle access rather than commute necessity — a shift that has sustained price appreciation even as office demand softened across the river.


FAQs

What makes Hudson County unique in New Jersey's real estate market? Hudson County functions as an extension of the New York City metro core rather than a conventional suburb. Its extreme renter majority, transit dependency, dense urban housing stock, and proximity to Manhattan create price dynamics that bear almost no resemblance to the rest of New Jersey — and make it one of the most expensive and economically polarized counties in the state.

Is Hudson County becoming more expensive or more affordable over time? Year-over-year prices rose 4.2% in the most recent period, continuing a long appreciation trend. With a price-to-income ratio already stretching well beyond the 4x national benchmark and rent burden affecting nearly half of renter households, affordability is structurally challenged — particularly for moderate-income residents who predate the county's gentrification wave.

Why is the child poverty rate so much higher than the overall poverty rate? Hudson County's 20.8% child poverty rate against a 14.8% overall poverty rate reflects the economic sorting common to high-cost urban counties. High-earning single professionals and dual-income households without children can absorb the cost of living; families — particularly those who arrived before the luxury development boom — often cannot. The result is a county where prosperity and childhood poverty exist within blocks of each other.

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