How to Search for Homes for Sale in Hunterdon County, NJ (2026 Guide)

Quick answer: You can now search every active Hunterdon County home for sale straight from Amy Roth’s website. The Search Homes tool pulls live MLS listings, so you can filter by town, price, and features, save your search, and get an alert the moment a new home hits the market — then work with a local agent who brings a designer’s eye to every showing.

Start your search

Head to the Search Homes link in the menu (or tap here). It opens a live, up-to-the-minute view of homes for sale across Hunterdon County — the same MLS data agents use, not a stale third-party feed. No account required to start browsing.

Filter for exactly what you want

Narrow the map to what matters to you: town (Clinton, Flemington, Califon, Tewksbury, Lebanon, High Bridge and more), price range, bedrooms and baths, property type, acreage, and features like a garage, pool, or historic character. Hunterdon is a patchwork of very different markets, so filtering by town is the fastest way to focus your search.

Save your search and get new-listing alerts

Create a free account and save your search to get notified the instant a matching home is listed. In a low-inventory market like ours, the buyers who see a new listing first are the ones who get the showing — and often the home. Alerts put you at the front of that line.

Why a search portal still needs a local agent

An online search is a fantastic starting point, but the listing photos and automated estimates only tell part of the story. As a Realtor and Berkeley-trained interior designer, I can tell you which homes photograph better than they live, which “needs updating” listings are actually a smart buy, and what a renovation would really involve. A portal shows you what’s for sale; a local agent helps you choose well and negotiate honestly. If you’ve ever wondered how the numbers work on the other side of a transaction, the same principle applies to buying — real local insight beats an algorithm.

FAQ

How do I search for homes for sale in Hunterdon County?

Use the Search Homes tool on agentamyroth.com, which pulls live MLS listings. Filter by town, price, and features, and save your search to get alerts when new homes are listed. You can also call or text Amy Roth at 732-735-0535 for a personalized search.

Is the home search on Amy Roth’s site up to date?

Yes. It pulls directly from the MLS, so listings are current — not a delayed third-party feed. New homes and status changes appear quickly.

Do I have to create an account to search?

No. You can browse Hunterdon County listings without an account. Creating a free account lets you save searches and receive new-listing alerts.

Ready to look? Start your Hunterdon County home search here, or call/text Amy Roth at 732-735-0535 to set up a search tailored to exactly what you’re after. New to the area? See the guide to the best towns in Hunterdon County.

Amy Roth is a Realtor with Haven Real Estate Collective, 19 Main Street, Clinton, NJ, and a Berkeley-trained interior designer with more than twenty years of design experience.

Do You Need a Big-Name Brokerage to Sell a Luxury Home in Hunterdon County?

The designer-appointed lounge at Haven Real Estate Collective, Amy Roth's boutique brokerage in Clinton, NJ

Quick answer: No — you do not need a national franchise with a famous name on the sign to sell a luxury home in Hunterdon County. High-end homes sell on presentation, pricing, and personal attention, not on a logo. A boutique, design-led brokerage often serves luxury sellers better, because you work directly with the principal and your home is prepared like an editorial spread rather than processed through a machine.

The assumption worth questioning

When Hunterdon County homeowners get ready to sell something special — a historic Clinton colonial, a Tewksbury estate on acreage, a river-town showpiece — the instinct is often to reach for the biggest name in luxury real estate. It feels safe. Surely the famous brand knows how to sell the expensive homes.

Here is what two decades in design and real estate have taught me: the brand is not what sells your home. The brand gets you a listing appointment. What actually produces a strong sale is how the home is presented, how it is priced, and how relentlessly one accountable person markets it. A logo does none of those things.

What the big luxury brands genuinely offer

To be fair, the national luxury firms bring real strengths: instant name recognition, polished collateral, and global syndication networks. Those things have value, and I would never pretend otherwise. If all you want is a recognizable name, they deliver that.

But two of those three — recognition and syndication — don’t move a specific buyer to pay top dollar for your specific home. And the third, polished marketing, is something a focused boutique can match or beat, because it isn’t being spread across hundreds of listings at once.

What a boutique gives you that a franchise can’t

A designer prepares your home — not a checklist

This is where Haven Real Estate Collective is genuinely different. I spent 20+ years as a Berkeley-trained interior designer before and alongside real estate. Every luxury listing I take is styled, lit, and presented with a designer’s eye — the difference between a home that photographs like a magazine feature and one that photographs like a listing. At this price point, buyers pay for the feeling of a space, and presentation is what creates it.

You work with me — not a junior associate

At a national office, the famous name often books the listing and then hands you to a team. At a boutique, the principal handles your sale start to finish. When you call, you get the person whose reputation is on the line — not a rotating cast.

Global reach without the franchise machine

Here’s the part sellers don’t always realize: the same qualified buyers see your home either way. Luxury listings syndicate through the MLS and the major portals regardless of the brokerage on the sign. A boutique reaches the same audience — it just gives that audience a more tailored, more personal story to fall in love with.

Bespoke, not templated

From custom photography to individual marketing strategy to honest, comps-backed pricing, a boutique treats your home as the only one that matters that week — because to me, it is. If you’ve ever wondered why the highest list price isn’t the best strategy, the same principle applies at the luxury level: honest positioning sells; ego pricing sits.

Come see what boutique looks like

Our office at 19 Main Street in downtown Clinton was designed the same way I stage a listing — because if I’m going to promise you a designer’s eye, the proof should start at the front door. If you’re preparing to sell a distinctive Hunterdon County home, I’d welcome an honest conversation about what it’s truly worth and how to present it at its best.

FAQ

Do I need a national luxury brand to sell a high-end home in Hunterdon County?

No. Luxury homes sell on presentation, pricing, and personal marketing — not on brand recognition. Boutique brokerages syndicate to the same buyers through the MLS and major portals, often with more tailored marketing and direct principal-level attention.

Can a boutique brokerage reach luxury buyers?

Yes. Qualified buyers find luxury listings through the MLS, Zillow, Realtor.com, and international syndication regardless of the brokerage name. The differentiator is how compellingly the home is prepared and presented, not the logo.

What makes Amy Roth and Haven different for luxury sellers?

Amy is a licensed NJ Realtor and a Berkeley-trained interior designer with 20+ years of design experience. At Haven Real Estate Collective, a boutique brokerage in Clinton, she personally handles each listing and stages it with a designer’s eye — bespoke service a franchise office rarely provides.

Call or text Amy Roth at 732-735-0535 for a private, no-obligation consultation on selling your luxury or distinctive Hunterdon County home. More questions? See the Hunterdon County real estate FAQ or how to choose a Hunterdon County agent.

Amy Roth is a Realtor with Haven Real Estate Collective, 19 Main Street, Clinton, NJ, and a Berkeley-trained interior designer with more than twenty years of design experience.

When Is the Right Time to Downsize Your Home in Hunterdon County, NJ?

Is It Time to Downsize? Amy Roth, Haven Real Estate Collective - carousel cover with golden-hour NJ colonial home

Quick answer: The right time to downsize your Hunterdon County home is when the house no longer fits your life — empty bedrooms, rising maintenance and property taxes, or stairs that are getting harder to justify — and you have a clear plan for where you are going next. Most downsizers here do best listing in spring or early fall, pricing accurately from day one, and preparing the home so decades of living reads as move-in ready to today’s buyers.

What are the signs it’s time to downsize?

There is no magic age. In my 11+ years selling homes across Hunterdon County, the sellers who are happiest with their move usually noticed a few of the same signals: whole rooms that only get vacuumed, not used; maintenance projects that keep getting deferred because the house is simply a lot to keep up; property taxes and utilities that feel out of proportion to how much of the home you actually live in; and a floor plan — usually stairs — that you are quietly working around.

The other signal is emotional readiness. If you find yourself talking about “someday” every time you visit friends who have already made the move, someday is probably closer than you think. Downsizing goes far better as a planned project than as a reaction to a health event or a market deadline.

Should I sell my current home before buying the next one?

For most Hunterdon County downsizers, yes — selling first (or negotiating a sale with a flexible closing or a use-and-occupancy period) puts you in the strongest position. You know exactly what you have to spend, you are not carrying two homes, and you can write a clean, non-contingent offer on the next place. The trade-off is timing pressure on the move itself, which is why I map out the sequence — prep, list, sell, close, move — with clients before the sign ever goes in the yard.

Buying first can make sense if you have the financial flexibility to carry both properties, but talk it through with your lender and your accountant before committing. Every situation is different, and the right answer depends on your equity, income, and risk tolerance.

Where do Hunterdon County downsizers usually move?

Plenty of my downsizing clients stay right here. Walkable town centers like Clinton and Flemington are popular landing spots — smaller homes, townhomes, and condos where you can get to coffee, restaurants, and the pharmacy without a long drive. Others look at 55+ and low-maintenance communities around Whitehouse Station, Lebanon, and neighboring Somerset County. And some head closer to kids and grandkids out of the area entirely. If you are weighing towns, my guide to the best towns to live in Hunterdon County is a good starting point.

How do I prepare a home I’ve lived in for decades?

This is where downsizing sales are won or lost. A home you have loved for 20 or 30 years usually needs editing, not renovating: decluttering room by room, removing about half the furniture so spaces feel larger, neutralizing a few dated finishes, and staging what remains so buyers see the house — not the life currently being lived in it.

Before real estate, I spent 20+ years as a Berkeley-trained interior designer, and I bring that into every listing. I walk the house with you, build a specific prep punch list, and focus your time and money only on the changes that actually move the sale price. Most of my downsizing clients are surprised by how short that list is.

What does downsizing actually cost?

Budget for two buckets. First, the cost of selling — commission, attorney fees, NJ realty transfer fee, and modest prep — which I break down in detail in my guide to the cost of selling a house in Hunterdon County. Second, the cost of the move itself: movers, possible short-term storage, and any estate-sale or cleanout help, which can range from a few hundred dollars to several thousand depending on how much needs to go. If you have owned the home a long time, ask your accountant about capital gains exclusions before you list — the rules matter and they depend on your specific situation.

How does pricing affect a downsizing sale?

More than anything else. Your first two weeks on the market are your strongest negotiating window, and a home that sits and takes price cuts hands leverage to buyers — exactly what you do not want when the proceeds are funding your next chapter. When you interview agents, ask each one for the comps behind their number, and be wary of the agent whose number is simply the highest. I wrote about how that plays out in why the agent who quotes the highest price often costs you the most. My commitment is the same for every seller: I will tell you the truth about price, even when it is not the biggest number you will hear that week.

This guide in six slides

Is It Time to Downsize? Amy Roth, Haven Real Estate Collective - carousel coverEmpty Rooms Are a Signal - signs it's time to downsizeEdit, Don't Renovate - staging beats remodelingStay Local, Live Smaller - walkable towns like Clinton NJPrice It Right, Day One - your first two weeks matter mostLet's Talk Downsizing - Amy Roth, Haven Real Estate Collective, Clinton NJ, 732-735-0535

I also shared this guide as a carousel on Instagram — see the post on @knockknockagentamy and follow along for more Hunterdon County real estate advice.

Frequently asked questions

How long does downsizing take from decision to moving day?

Plan on a few months, not a few weeks. Decluttering and prep typically take 4–8 weeks for a long-owned home, and once listed, a well-priced Hunterdon County home plus a normal contract-to-close timeline generally means roughly 2–3 months from list to keys. Starting the sorting early is the single best thing you can do.

Do I need to renovate before selling?

Usually no. Major renovations rarely return their full cost at sale. Cleaning, decluttering, paint, and smart staging almost always deliver more per dollar spent — and as a designer, I will tell you honestly which projects are worth it for your specific house.

Can you help me find my next home too?

Yes. I regularly help downsizing clients coordinate both sides — selling the family home and finding the next one — whether that is in Clinton, Flemington, a 55+ community nearby, or timing your sale around a move out of the area. For more common questions, see my Hunterdon County real estate FAQ.

Thinking about downsizing this year or next? Call or text me at 732-735-0535 and we can walk through your timeline, your home’s realistic value, and what your next chapter could look like — no pressure, just a straight answer. You can also learn more about how I work with Hunterdon County sellers.

Amy Roth is a licensed NJ Realtor with Haven Real Estate Collective (19 Main Street, Clinton, NJ) with 11+ years of experience, a 5.0 rating on Google, and a 20+ year background in interior design. She specializes in staging-led selling and downsizing across Hunterdon County and neighboring Somerset, Warren, and Morris County towns.

Why the Agent Who Quotes the Highest Price Often Costs You the Most

Quick answer: When you interview listing agents, the one who quotes the highest price is often the one who costs you the most money. The tactic is common enough that it has an industry name — “buying the listing” — and it usually ends with your home sitting on the market, a price reduction, and a final sale at or below the number the honest agent gave you on day one.

How “buying the listing” works

You interview three agents. Two show you comparable sales and land in the same range. The third quotes a number $40,000 higher. It feels great to hear — so they get the listing.

The problem: buyers don’t pay for optimism. They compare your home to every other option in Clinton, Flemington, or Tewksbury, and they know the market as well as anyone — because they’re living in it every weekend.

What overpricing actually costs you

You waste your most valuable window

Your listing gets its most attention in the first two weeks. That’s when every serious buyer saved-search alert fires. Overpriced, you burn that window on showings that go nowhere — and that first impression never happens twice.

The price-reduction spiral

A few quiet weeks later comes the call: “The market is telling us something — we need a reduction.” Now your home carries two red flags buyers can see: a high days-on-market count and a price cut. Both invite lower offers and tougher negotiations.

You often net less than the honest number

I’ve watched Hunterdon County homes list high with another agent, sit, reduce, and close at — or below — the price I recommended in the original listing consultation. The seller didn’t get a higher price. They got a longer, more stressful sale and the same outcome.

How to protect yourself when hiring an agent

Ask every agent the same question: “Walk me through the comparable sales behind your number.” An honest price recommendation comes with addresses, sale dates, and adjustments you can follow. If one agent’s number is dramatically higher than the others, don’t ask yourself which agent is smartest — ask which sales support that number. Usually, none do.

Then ask what their plan is if the home doesn’t draw offers in the first three weeks. An agent who priced honestly has a marketing answer. An agent who bought the listing has a price-reduction schedule.

Where I stand

I’ll tell you the truth about your price even if it costs me the listing — and sometimes it does. But my sellers get their strongest offers while the listing is fresh, keep their negotiating leverage, and skip the reduction spiral. Combined with designer staging and preparation, honest pricing is how you actually maximize your net.

FAQ

Shouldn’t I just try a higher price first, since I can always reduce it?

“Testing the market” costs more than it sounds like it should. The buyers most likely to pay top dollar see your listing in week one; by the time you reduce, they’ve moved on, and the buyers who remain use your days-on-market against you.

How do I know if an agent’s price recommendation is honest?

Ask to see the comps — specific addresses, sale dates, and how the agent adjusted for differences. An honest recommendation is a walkthrough of evidence, not a single flattering number.

What will my Hunterdon County home actually sell for?

Call or text Amy Roth at 732-735-0535 for a free comparative market analysis. You’ll see every comp behind the number — the honest answer, even when it’s not the biggest one you’ll hear that week. More questions? Read the Hunterdon County real estate FAQ or how to vet any Hunterdon County agent.

Amy Roth is a Realtor with Haven Real Estate Collective, 19 Main Street, Clinton, NJ, and a Berkeley-trained interior designer with 20+ years of design experience.

Sell my current listings

The 7 Best Towns to Live in Hunterdon County, NJ — A Local Realtor’s Honest Guide

Inside the Haven Real Estate Collective office at 19 Main Street in downtown Clinton, NJ — designer lounge with green velvet sofa

Quick answer: The best town in Hunterdon County depends on what you’re optimizing for: Clinton for walkable historic charm, Flemington for value and revitalized downtown energy, Tewksbury for land and equestrian estates, Califon for storybook river-town quiet, High Bridge for affordability and trail access, Lebanon for commuter convenience, and Frenchtown for artsy river life. As a realtor who works all of them, here’s my honest local take.

1. Clinton — the postcard

The Red Mill, a walkable Main Street, strong schools, and quick I-78 access. Clinton is what out-of-state buyers picture when they say “charming New Jersey town.” Inventory is chronically tight — homes here move fast and hold value. (My office is at 19 Main Street, so I’m biased — and right.)

2. Flemington — the value play

The county seat is mid-revitalization: new dining, the Stangl arts district, and more house for your money than Clinton. Buyers who were priced out of neighboring towns keep landing here happily.

3. Tewksbury — land and horses

Rolling hills, equestrian properties, and estate lots. If your dream includes acreage, a barn, or genuine privacy within commuting distance of NYC, Tewksbury is the answer — with a market all its own that rewards an agent who knows it.

4. Califon — the storybook

A tiny Victorian borough on the South Branch of the Raritan. Kayaks, the Columbia Trail, and a community where everyone waves. Homes rarely come up; when they do, they’re spoken for quickly.

5. High Bridge — the sleeper

One of the county’s most affordable entry points, with train service and direct access to Ken Lockwood Gorge and the Columbia Trail. First-time buyers: start here before everyone else figures it out.

6. Lebanon — the commuter’s secret

A small borough with big convenience: Route 22/78 access, close to everything, quieter than it has any right to be.

7. Frenchtown — the artist

Galleries, indie shops, and Delaware River views. If Lambertville stole your heart but not your budget, Frenchtown deserves a look.

Which town is right for you?

This is exactly the conversation I love having. Tell me your commute, budget, and how you actually live — I’ll tell you which two towns to tour first. Call or text 732-735-0535, or read how to choose a Hunterdon County agent and the Hunterdon County real estate FAQ.

Amy Roth is a Realtor with Haven Real Estate Collective in Clinton, NJ, and a Berkeley-trained interior designer. She helps buyers, sellers, and downsizers across Hunterdon County.

See my current listings on Haven Real Estate Collective.

How Much Does It Cost to Sell a House in Hunterdon County, NJ? (2026 Guide)

Client lounge at Haven Real Estate Collective, Amy Roth's brokerage office in Clinton, New Jersey

Quick answer: Most Hunterdon County home sellers should budget roughly 6% to 10% of their sale price in total selling costs — agent commissions (fully negotiable, and discussed up front), New Jersey’s realty transfer fee, attorney fees, and prep work like staging, repairs, and photography. On a $600,000 Clinton-area home, that’s typically $36,000–$60,000, though the right preparation often earns most of it back in a stronger sale price.

The main costs when selling in Hunterdon County

1. Real estate commissions (negotiable)

Commissions in New Jersey are set by agreement, not by law, and every listing agreement spells them out in writing before you commit. Since the 2024 industry changes, seller and buyer agent compensation are negotiated separately. When we meet, you’ll see exact numbers for your situation before signing anything.

2. NJ realty transfer fee

New Jersey charges sellers a graduated realty transfer fee at closing — for most Hunterdon County price points it works out to a bit under 1% of the sale price. Your attorney or title company calculates the precise figure; seniors and certain sellers qualify for partial exemptions.

3. Attorney review and closing costs

Nearly every NJ sale involves a real estate attorney — typically a flat fee in the low four figures. Add modest costs for payoff processing, recording, and any municipal certificates your town requires (Clinton, Flemington, and High Bridge each have their own requirements — I handle this checklist for my sellers).

4. Preparation: where a designer’s eye pays for itself

This is the category most agents treat as an afterthought and I treat as the whole game. As a Berkeley-trained interior designer with 20+ years of experience, I plan staging, paint, lighting, and presentation room by room before we list. Smart prep usually costs a fraction of what it returns — buyers pay more for homes they can picture living in.

What you’ll actually net

Your net = sale price − mortgage payoff − the costs above. Before you decide anything, I’ll build you a personalized net sheet so you can see the real number for your home — no surprises at closing. Here’s how to vet any Hunterdon County agent, including me.

FAQ

Do I have to pay the buyer’s agent in NJ in 2026?

It’s negotiable. Offering buyer-agent compensation can widen your buyer pool, but it’s a strategy decision we make together based on your home and the current market.

Is it worth doing repairs before selling in Hunterdon County?

Selectively, yes. Fix what shows up in every inspection report (safety items, moisture) and what photographs badly. Skip renovations that won’t return their cost — I’ll tell you honestly which is which.

How do I get an exact number for my home?

Call or text Amy Roth at 732-735-0535 for a free valuation and personalized net sheet, or start with the Hunterdon County real estate FAQ.

Amy Roth is a Realtor with Haven Real Estate Collective, 19 Main Street, Clinton, NJ. This article is general information, not legal or tax advice — your attorney and accountant confirm the exact figures for your sale.

Happy 4th of July from Amy Roth

Happy 4th of July from Amy Roth, Hunterdon County Realtor with Haven Real Estate Collective
Happy 4th of July from Amy Roth, Hunterdon County Realtor with Haven Real Estate Collective

Happy 4th of July, Hunterdon County!

Wishing you and your family a safe, sunny, and celebration-filled Fourth of July — whether you’re firing up the grill, gathering with neighbors, or watching fireworks light up the summer sky.

The Fourth is one of my favorite days to be out in our community. There’s nothing quite like a small-town Hunterdon celebration — flags along Main Street, backyard cookouts, and that unmistakable feeling of home.

And really, that’s what this work is all about: helping people find a place to call home. Whenever you’re ready to buy, sell, or downsize in Clinton, Flemington, Califon, Tewksbury, or anywhere across Hunterdon County, I’d be honored to help.

For today, though — put the phone down, enjoy the fireworks, and stay safe out there.

Amy Roth, Realtor® · Haven Real Estate Collective
19 Main Street, Clinton, NJ 08809 · 732-735-0535

Check out my current listings at the Haven Real Estate Collective. Happy 4th of July!

4 Deerwood Drive, Clinton NJ: A Private Contemporary on Four Wooded Acres

4 Deerwood Drive Clinton NJ private entrance and contemporary exterior

4 Deerwood Drive is a light-filled custom contemporary set at the end of a private lane on just over four acres in Clinton, New Jersey. A soapstone kitchen, hardwood throughout, a finished basement theater, a third-floor loft, and a custom outdoor pizza oven make it as livable as it is private — and it’s move-in ready.

4 Deerwood Drive Clinton NJ contemporary home exterior on four wooded acres
4 Deerwood Drive, Clinton, NJ — private, contemporary, and set back in the trees.

Take the Video Tour

Some houses announce themselves. This one waits for you to arrive. You reach 4 Deerwood Drive by way of a private lane, and by the time the home comes into view — low, contemporary, framed by mature trees — the rest of the day has already gone quiet. Four-plus acres will do that. So will good bones.

I’ve spent twenty years reading houses before I ever sold one, and what I look for is rarely the thing on the spec sheet. It’s flow. It’s light. It’s whether the rooms know what they’re for. This one does.

A Kitchen With a Point of View

The custom kitchen is the heart of the home, and it doesn’t try too hard. Soapstone counters — honest, durable, quietly beautiful — anchor the space without shouting. Warm hardwood runs underfoot here and throughout the home, tying every room to the next. It’s a kitchen built for actual cooking and easy gathering, the kind of room that fills up on a Sunday and never feels crowded.

Custom soapstone kitchen with hardwood floors at 4 Deerwood Drive Clinton NJ
Soapstone counters, custom cabinetry, and hardwood throughout.

Light, and How the House Uses It

Light is the home’s best material, and the architecture knows it. Arched and oversized windows pull the surrounding greenery inside, so the great room feels less like a room with a view and more like a room in conversation with the trees. Morning light, afternoon light, the long gold of a summer evening — the house catches all of it.

Room to Gather, Room to Retreat

Downstairs, the finished basement holds a dedicated home theater — the right room for movie nights, game days, and the kind of weekend that asks nothing of you. Up top, a third-floor loft flexes into whatever you need: an artist’s studio, a home office, a quiet place to think above the rest of the house.

The primary suite is its own retreat, with a private ensuite bath and dual closets fitted with built-ins. And because thoughtful design lives in the small decisions, the laundry sits on the main floor — exactly where daily life actually happens.

Third-floor loft artist studio and home office space at 4 Deerwood Drive Clinton NJ
The third-floor loft — studio, office, or a quiet place to think.

Outdoor Living, Built for Hunterdon Summers

Outside is where the four acres earn their keep. A custom outdoor pizza oven turns a Friday night into an event. Lush, deer-resistant landscaping means the grounds stay beautiful without becoming a second job. There’s even a dedicated catio for the cats — a small, charming detail that tells you the people who built this home thought about everyone who’d live in it. Private, tranquil, and genuinely peaceful: this is the part of the listing photos can’t quite hold.

The Details

  • 📍 Address: 4 Deerwood Drive, Clinton, NJ
  • 🌳 Lot: Just over 4 private acres on a quiet lane
  • 🍳 Kitchen: Custom, with soapstone counters
  • 🪵 Floors: Hardwood throughout
  • 🎬 Lower level: Finished basement with home theater room
  • 🎨 Third floor: Loft for artist studio or home office
  • 🛏️ Primary suite: Ensuite bath, dual closets with built-ins
  • 🧺 Laundry: Conveniently on the main floor
  • 🍕 Outdoors: Custom pizza oven, deer-resistant landscaping, dedicated catio
  • ✨ Condition: Beautifully maintained and move-in ready

Frequently Asked Questions

Where is 4 Deerwood Drive located?

4 Deerwood Drive is in Clinton, New Jersey — set at the end of a private lane on just over four acres in Hunterdon County, within easy reach of historic downtown Clinton and major commuter routes.

How big is the property?

The home sits on just over four private, wooded acres with lush, deer-resistant landscaping.

What makes this home stand out?

Beyond the privacy and the acreage, it’s the custom touches: a soapstone kitchen, hardwood throughout, a finished basement home theater, a third-floor loft, a custom outdoor pizza oven, and a dedicated catio — all in a beautifully maintained, move-in-ready home.

Is the home move-in ready?

Yes. The home has been well maintained throughout and is ready for its next owners — no projects waiting in the wings.

Come See It in Person

Photos can show you the soapstone and the light. They can’t show you how the house feels when you stand at the end of that private lane. If you’ve been waiting for space that’s been genuinely thought through — for a home, not just a house — I’d love to walk you through this one. Browse our current Hunterdon County listings or learn more about working with Amy.

New to the area? The Town of Clinton offers a snapshot of one of Hunterdon County’s most beloved small towns.

Amy Roth · Haven Real Estate Collective · Clinton, NJ
📞 732-735-0535 · ✉️ agentamyroth@gmail.com · 📷 @knockknockagentamy

The sun rises and the sun sets. Everything else is negotiable.

Califon NJ Open House — 13 Raritan Dr | Sunday 12–2 PM

There’s a new listing in Califon worth circling on your calendar, and you don’t want to experience this one through photos alone. Join Amy this Sunday, June 7th, from 12:00 to 2:00 PM for an open house at 13 Raritan Drive — a sun-filled home in one of Hunterdon County’s most charming pockets.

Why You’ll Want to Stop By

From the moment you walk in, 13 Raritan Drive feels like home. Hardwood floors run throughout, natural light pours into every room, and the updated kitchen and refreshed baths make it truly move-in ready. With 3 bedrooms and 2 full baths, there’s room to spread out — and the walkout basement adds flexible space for a home office, gym, or rec room.

Step outside onto the spacious deck and you’ll see why this home is built for everyday living and easy entertaining. The oversized garage means storage is never an issue, and the setting — top-rated schools, small-town character, and an easy commute — is hard to beat.

Open House Details

  • 📍 Address: 13 Raritan Drive, Califon, NJ
  • 📅 Date: This Sunday, June 7th
  • 🕛 Time: 12:00 PM – 2:00 PM
  • 🏡 Host: Amy Roth

Come Say Hello

Whether you’re actively searching, just starting to look, or simply curious about what’s new in the Califon market, you’re welcome to drop by. Amy will be on hand to walk you through the home, answer your questions, and share everything that makes this property special.

Homes like this don’t sit long in this market — so come see it for yourself before someone else calls it home. See you Sunday!

Questions before the open house? Reach out to Amy anytime agentamyroth@gmail.com, she’s always happy to help.

🌷 Spring 2026 Real Estate Market Outlook in New Jersey

By Amy Roth – Haven Real Estate Collective | Clinton, NJ

The Spring 2026 Real Estate Market is almost here. As spring approaches, New Jersey’s housing market is poised for a period of modest growth, renewed activity, and shifting opportunities for both buyers and sellers. After several years of market volatility and rising mortgage rates, 2026 looks like a year of balance and thoughtful movement rather than extreme swings—perfect for clients ready to make informed decisions.

📉 Market Trends: Stability Over Frenzy


Across the U.S., economists and real estate analysts are forecasting a housing market that continues to stabilize in 2026. Rather than explosive price increases, we’re seeing measured gains in home values and sales activity. National forecasts project modest price growth and a slight uptick in existing home sales as mortgage rates ease gradually. (Zillow)

For New Jersey, this translates into:

  • Steady price appreciation—continuing the trend of resilient values statewide.
  • Gradual increase in buyer interest as affordability improves with slower price growth.
  • Sales activity picking up while remaining well below historical highs. (Zillow)

📊 Inventory: More Choices, But Still Limited

One of the key stories entering The Spring 2026 Real Estate Market is inventory—or rather, the lack of abundant inventory. Recent data shows that while the number of homes for sale in NJ is rising compared to the lows of recent years, overall supply remains tighter than what many buyers would like. (New Jersey Real Estate Report)

Sellers still hold leverage in many desirable communities, especially in North and Central Jersey, where:

  • Single-family homes are selling above list price on average.
  • Days on market remain competitive, often under six weeks in desirable ZIP codes.
  • Low months-of-supply figures point to ongoing demand pressures for quality inventory. (New Jersey Real Estate Report)

This dynamic means strategic pricing and targeted marketing are more important than ever for sellers—while buyers should be prepared with strong financing and quick decision-making support.


🔑 What Spring 2026 Means for Buyers and Sellers

🏡 For Sellers

Spring historically brings more buyers to the market, and with inventory still constrained in many NJ submarkets, well-priced homes are likely to draw significant interest.
Tips for sellers this season:

  • Price accurately right out of the gate to attract serious buyers.
  • Invest in staging and professional photography.
  • Ensure offers are presented with clear timelines and expectations.

Your home’s equity is still strong, and motivation paired with strategy will yield the best results.

👨‍👩‍👧‍👦 For Buyers

While affordability challenges haven’t disappeared, conditions are improving slowly thanks to more inventory and slight easing of mortgage rates.
Tips for buyers in the Spring 2026 Real Estate Market:

  • Get pre-approved ahead of time to stand out in competitive situations.
  • Explore adjacent towns if your top choice lacks inventory.
  • Be ready to act quickly—and negotiate smartly.

This isn’t the market of frantic bidding wars, but prepared contenders will still have the advantage.


📍 Local Market Nuances: New Jersey Specifics

New Jersey’s varied submarkets continue to perform differently. For example, areas like Bergen County show higher median prices and still limited supply, while other regions have slowly gained inventory. (Bergen County Real Estate)

The overall narrative for NJ is one of resilient value, steady demand, and thoughtful market participation, rather than volatility. That’s great news for clients who want clarity, confidence, and well-informed decision-making this spring.


🏁 Final Takeaway

The Spring 2026 Real Estate Market in New Jersey is shaping up to be healthy and strategic—especially for buyers and sellers who plan ahead and work with experienced local professionals. With prices growing sensibly, inventory expanding (though not overwhelmingly), and economic indicators leaning toward balance, this spring season could be one of the best windows for meaningful real estate activity in years.

If you’re thinking about buying, selling, or investing in New Jersey real estate this spring, I’d love to connect and walk you through what these trends mean specifically for your neighborhood and goals. 🏠✨


Amy Roth, Real Estate Advisor
Haven Real Estate Collective | Clinton, NJ
agentamyroth@gmail.com
REad more on my blog HERE


Thanks for reading my article on The Spring 2026 Real Estate Market. I hope you found it helpful. Don’t hesitate to reach out at 732-735-0535. Thanks, Amy Roth.

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