
New Jersey homeowners already know the headlines. The state has ranked first in the nation for property taxes for years running, with the statewide average effective rate sitting at 2.23% and the average annual bill crossing $10,000 for the first time in 2025. Most buyers see that number and absorb it as a fixed cost of entry. What rarely gets calculated, though, is what that tax burden actually adds up to over the full span of a mortgage.
The focus during the homebuying process almost always falls on the interest rate. That makes sense. A percentage point or two on a 30-year loan is worth tens of thousands of dollars over time, and prospective buyers spend considerable energy shopping for the best terms. But in New Jersey specifically, the tax side of the monthly payment deserves the same level of scrutiny, and most buyers never run the full numbers before closing.
Continue reading What NJ’s Property Tax Burden Actually Costs You Over the Life of a Mortgage
