37 Central Avenue

Property details·Ewing, Mercer County, New Jersey·1102_273_79

Location

Address

37 Central Avenue

Ewing, NJ 08618

Mercer County

Parcel ID

1102_273_79

Coordinates

40.255950, -74.780892

County context

Mercer County 2026 Insights

Mercer County, New Jersey: Where Ivy League Prestige Meets a Surprisingly Fractured Housing Market

Mercer County sits at one of the most intellectually charged intersections in America. Princeton University anchors its northern tier, the state capital Trenton anchors its southwestern edge, and in between lies a county that contains both extraordinary wealth and stubborn, grinding poverty — sometimes separated by less than five miles. That tension runs through every number in this dataset.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$404,882~26% above national median home value
Rent Burden Rate48.1%vs. 30% healthy threshold — deeply stressed
Gini Index0.502Among the most unequal counties in NJ
YoY Price Change+1.7%Cooling sharply after pandemic-era surges

The Princeton Effect — and Its Limits

Princeton's gravitational pull on Mercer County's housing market is real but often overstated. Yes, graduate degree attainment (20.6%) nearly doubles the national average, and the county's per capita income of $52,101 sits comfortably above the national benchmark. But the headline median household income of $96,333 — robust as it sounds — masks a Gini coefficient of 0.502, a level of inequality more commonly associated with urban cores like Newark or Camden than with leafy, university-adjacent suburbs. This isn't just a tale of academic prosperity.

Trenton tells the other half of the story. The capital city contributes disproportionately to the county's 11.1% poverty rate and a child poverty figure of 13.6% that should alarm policymakers — particularly in a county where public assistance and SNAP enrollment hint at persistent need beneath the aggregate income figures.

A Renters' Crisis Hidden in Plain Sight

The most alarming story in this data is what's happening to renters. With 38.1% of households renting and a median rent of $1,515, nearly half of all renters (48.1%) are spending more than 30% of their income on housing — and one in four (25.1%) are severely cost-burdened, exceeding 50% of income on rent. These aren't the numbers of a healthy rental market; they're the numbers of a market that has quietly failed a significant portion of its population.

Work-from-home adoption at 17.8% likely represents the professional class that has partially insulated itself from these pressures, while lower-income renters — many concentrated in Trenton and Ewing — have no such buffer.

Housing Stock and the Cooling Market

The county's median year-built of 1957 signals older, often smaller stock that hasn't expanded meaningfully to meet demand. The gap between the median home price ($404,882) and the 90th percentile ($950,000) — a spread of over half a million dollars — illustrates just how bifurcated the ownership market is. Price-per-square-foot at $262 remains elevated, and with year-over-year appreciation cooling to just 1.7%, the post-pandemic frenzy has clearly subsided.

The 6.1% vacancy rate, combined with relatively modest recent sales volume, suggests a market in a holding pattern rather than active distress.


FAQs

What makes Mercer County unique? Few counties in America contain both a globally ranked research university (Princeton) and a struggling post-industrial capital city (Trenton) within the same borders — and that duality drives almost every anomaly in the county's economic and housing data, from elite income figures to severe rent burden statistics.

Is Mercer County affordable compared to the rest of New Jersey? Relatively, yes — for buyers. At roughly $405K median, it's more accessible than Bergen or Morris counties. But for renters, the picture is genuinely dire: nearly half are cost-burdened, suggesting affordability is a class-dependent concept here.

Is the Mercer County housing market slowing down? Yes. The 1.7% year-over-year price appreciation is a significant deceleration from pandemic-era double-digit growth seen across New Jersey. With elevated unemployment (6.1%) and a thinning sales volume, 2024–2025 looks like a period of stabilization rather than expansion.

Local market context

Ewing has 11,516 properties in our comprehensive database.

With an average price of $356,528, Ewing offers mid-range housing options.

Buyers can expect to pay around $194 per square foot in this market.

Home prices in Ewing are 32% lower than the Mercer County average.

MetricEwingMercer Countyvs County
Average Price$356,528$525,447-32%
Avg Sq Ft1,8341,964-7%
Price/Sq Ft$194$268-28%
Properties11,516146,284-92%

Nearby properties

Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.

Frequently Asked Questions About Ewing, NJ Real Estate

What is the average home price in Ewing, NJ?

The average home price in Ewing, NJ is $356,528, based on analysis of 11,516 properties in our database.

How many properties are tracked in Ewing, NJ?

Our database includes 11,516 properties in Ewing, NJ, providing comprehensive market coverage.

What is the price per square foot in Ewing, NJ?

The average price per square foot in Ewing, NJ is $194. This is calculated from an average home price of $356,528 and average size of 1,834 square feet.

What is the average home size in Ewing, NJ?

Homes in Ewing, NJ average 1,834 square feet, with an average price of $356,528.

How does Ewing, NJ compare to other cities in Mercer County?

Ewing, NJ is one of many cities in Mercer County, NJ with property data available. Browse other cities in the county to compare market conditions and pricing.

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