Desperate to buy a home in NJ and avoid a bidding war? Lower your expectations.

It may still feel like winter, but agents say the spring real estate market has already arrived.

The spring market usually starts the week after the Super Bowl. It’s the season when more homes will be listed and more buyers will begin their search.

“I’ve been very busy today getting the listings ready for release,” Emily Wilkins of Goldcoast Sotheby’s International Realty in Ocean City told NJ.com on Monday.

In the parts of the state hardest hit by last month’s snowfall, the season may start a little later.

“People don’t want to show their homes because of how cold it is,” said Michael Read, principal at Bridgeway Mortgage & Real Estate Services in Morristown. “We need a week or two of thaw and birds chirping.”

Rates on a 30-year mortgage have recently fallen to around 6.1% from a high of 7.8%.

“Every 1% drop in mortgage rates feels like a 9% reduction in the purchase price for a buyer,” said Jeffrey Otteau, Managing Partner & Chief Economist at Otteau Group, Inc. and Managing Broker at Otteau Realty Advisors.

Falling mortgage rates make buying more affordable, even when home prices stay the same.

House prices rose 5% last year – a slowdown from growth of 9% in 2024 and 12% in 2023.

“House prices are barely going up this year,” he said. “About 2%, compared to a peak of 18% in 2021.”

Inventory remains at historic lows but is growing. Interest rates have crept down and prices are not rising as much as they used to.

Statewide inventory also rose, rising 14 percent in January from a year earlier, though still well below what is considered a normal market. Otteau says these changes should give buyers more options and more say in negotiations.

But for now, agents say, they’re still seeing bidding wars.

A home in Parsippany received 16 offers last week. Another small Cape Cod in Rumson, which was listed for $1.2 million, received 17 offers, and Sharon Shahinian of Brown Harris Stevens said her clients bid $1.7 million and lost.

“We will have a market similar to what we have,” she said. “It’s going to be robust. Eager buyers with all their installments lined up will compete for tight stock.”

So what should buyers do to get ready to buy a home this spring? NJ.com asked real estate agents across the country. Here’s their advice:

An experienced agent can help you navigate the market, negotiate and flag red flags.

“I’ll point out more things I don’t like than I like,” said Tyler Pontier of Howard Hanna Rand Realty, who works primarily in Morris, Essex and Bergen counties.

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