Assessed In Jefferson Twp

Property details·Lake Hopatcong, Sussex County, New Jersey·1912_70220_1.01

Location

Address

Assessed In Jefferson Twp

Lake Hopatcong, NJ 07849

Sussex County

Parcel ID

1912_70220_1.01

Coordinates

40.974677, -74.631258

County context

Sussex County 2026 Insights

Sussex County, NJ: The Quiet Corner Where New York Money Meets Rural New Jersey

There's a particular kind of New Jersey that doesn't match the turnpike-and-refineries stereotype — and Sussex County is it. Nestled in the far northwest corner of the state, bordered by New York and Pennsylvania, this is lake country, farm country, and increasingly, remote-worker country. The data tells the story of a place that earns like a suburb but lives like the countryside.

Affluent, Rural, and Aging — A Rare Combination

Sussex County's median household income of $114,316 is more than 50% above the national median, yet its median home price sits at $410,000 — a price-to-income ratio of roughly 3.6x, actually below the national benchmark of 4x. That's genuinely unusual in the New York metro orbit, where most counties carry ratios well above 6x or 7x. What this means in practice: residents here have real purchasing power relative to their housing costs, a rarity for anyone within commuting distance of Manhattan.

The homeownership rate of 84.9% reflects this dynamic vividly. With 78.2% single-family homes and a vacancy rate of 8.7% — buoyed by seasonal lake and mountain properties around places like Lake Hopatcong and the Delaware Water Gap — this is overwhelmingly a place where people own their patch of land.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$410,000Price-to-income ratio of ~3.6x — below 4x national benchmark
Homeownership Rate84.9%Far above national avg of ~65%
YoY Price Change+6.8%Outpacing national appreciation trends
Rent Burden49.3%Severe stress among the county's small renter class

The Hidden Tension: Renters Left Behind

Here's where the story gets complicated. Only 15.1% of households rent — but of those who do, nearly half are rent-burdened, and 24% face severe rent burden, meaning they spend more than half their income on housing. When a county economy is built around homeowners with six-figure incomes, the infrastructure for affordable rentals simply doesn't develop. Service workers, seasonal employees at the county's ski resorts (Mountain Creek in Vernon is the closest major ski area to New York City), and younger residents who haven't entered the ownership market face a quiet affordability crisis invisible in the headline numbers.

Remote Work and an Aging Backbone

At a median age of 44.1 — older than both the state and national medians — and with 18.4% of residents over 65, Sussex County is aging noticeably. The 13.7% work-from-home rate suggests the pandemic-era migration wave touched this corner of New Jersey too, bringing younger remote workers who could trade a Hoboken one-bedroom for a lakeside colonial. That likely explains the 6.8% year-over-year price appreciation, which is running well above national norms.

The 1.1% public transit usage and 77.4% solo car commute rate confirm what the geography already implies: this place runs on cars, driveways, and distance from density.


FAQs

What makes Sussex County, NJ unique in real estate terms? Sussex County offers one of the few pockets within the New York metro area where income-to-home-price ratios remain below the national average. Combined with an unusually high 84.9% homeownership rate and a genuinely rural character — farms, lakes, ski resorts — it attracts buyers priced out of Morris or Bergen County who still want the cultural and economic benefits of the metro region.

Is Sussex County NJ a good place to buy a home in 2024? The fundamentals look solid: prices are rising at 6.8% annually, affordability relative to local incomes is better than most of the state, and the remote-work migration trend has injected new demand. The main risk is the aging demographic base and limited economic diversification — the county leans heavily on residential character rather than commercial or industrial growth.

Why are rents so high relative to income in Sussex County? The rental market in Sussex County is thin by design. With only 15% of housing units renter-occupied and the stock dominated by single-family homes, renters compete for a limited supply not purpose-built for affordability. Median rent of $1,503 sounds modest by New Jersey standards, but it's pushing well beyond comfortable reach for lower-wage workers who staff the county's hospitality, retail, and care economy.

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