Ridgewood is the Bergen County town that consistently lands on every "best places to raise a family" list — and unlike a lot of those lists, it actually deserves the placement. Strong schools, real walkability, and a community character that doesn't show up in spreadsheets. But buyers underestimate two things: how competitive the school-zone bidding is, and how meaningful the commute differences are within the town itself.
Here's what I tell my Ridgewood buyers and sellers.
What the Ridgewood market is doing in 2026
The headline: average home value around $988k and rising about 4% year-over-year — steady appreciation, not the dramatic spikes you see in Hoboken or Montclair. Ridgewood's market behaves more like a blue-chip stock than a growth play.
What's actually moving:
- Sub-$1M inventory is the most competitive segment. Three- and four-bedroom homes under $1M move in days, sometimes with multiple offers. Family buyers from Brooklyn, Manhattan, and other Bergen towns concentrate here.
- The $1.2M-$2M tier is the bread-and-butter. Larger family homes on tree-lined streets. This is where most Ridgewood transactions happen, and it's a stable, well-functioning market.
- Above $2.5M is more patient. Estate homes near the Ridgewood Country Club or in the Heights take 30-60 days.
- School proximity matters more than usual. Ridgewood has six elementary schools with different reputations. Catchment maps significantly affect price.
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The Ridgewood neighborhoods, compared
Ridgewood is more cohesive than towns like Montclair or Maplewood — there's no dramatic price gradient. But the differences in feel, school catchment, and walkability still matter.
The Village / Downtown
Within walking distance of the train station, restaurants, and shops. Older Victorians and Colonials, walkable to multiple parks. The highest-demand area for buyers who want to use the town's amenities daily.
The Heights
Larger lots, country-club proximity, century-old estates. Quieter, more residential. Longer drive to the train. Strong long-term hold but slower to transact.
Willard / Travell Catchment
Some of the most consistently sought-after elementary catchments in town. Family-focused, slightly newer housing stock, larger yards. Quick turnover when inventory appears.
Glen Heights / Northern Edge
The most affordable part of Ridgewood. Smaller homes, longer to the train, but full access to Ridgewood schools. Best entry point for first-time buyers committed to the district.
Schools — what makes Ridgewood different
Ridgewood Public Schools is one of the most consistently top-ranked districts in New Jersey, and the reputation is earned. A few things to actually know:
- Six elementary schools serve different parts of town: Willard, Travell, Somerville, Hawes, Orchard, and Ridge. Each has its own culture and community feel.
- Two middle schools: Benjamin Franklin and George Washington. Families often have strong preferences.
- Ridgewood High School consistently ranks among the top 10 public high schools in NJ. The math, science, and music programs are particularly strong.
- The competitive pressure is real. Many Ridgewood students are aiming for top-tier colleges. That brings advantages (strong peer cohort, well-funded programs) and pressures (workload, stress, college-prep intensity) that don't suit every family.
What I tell buyers: if your child won't thrive in a high-achievement environment, look at neighboring towns with strong-but-less-intense districts (Glen Rock, Wyckoff, Allendale). Ridgewood is exceptional, but it's not the only good answer in Bergen County.
The commute
The Ridgewood train station is on NJ Transit's Bergen County and Main lines, with service to Hoboken and Manhattan via Secaucus transfer. Express trains to Penn Station run roughly 47-55 minutes.
Important to know:
- You'll likely transfer at Secaucus Junction for NYC. That adds time and a connection point that can break down during weather or service issues.
- Direct buses (Coach USA / Short Line) to Port Authority are popular alternatives — roughly 45-65 minutes depending on traffic, but no transfer.
- Driving to Manhattan is 22 miles via Route 17 and George Washington Bridge. Peak commute can hit 90+ minutes.
- Many Ridgewood residents work in Manhattan financial services and accept the commute trade-off in exchange for the schools and town.
If your commute is more than three days a week to Midtown, Ridgewood's commute is on the longer side of acceptable. Hybrid workers and parents juggling school pickup find it more workable.
Property taxes — what to expect
Ridgewood's average property tax bill is around $16,952, with an effective tax rate near 2.80% — actually slightly below the NJ state median. On a $1.2M home, expect $22-28k per year. On a $2M home, $35k+.
Compared to similar-priced homes in Essex County (Montclair, Maplewood, South Orange), Ridgewood's effective rate is meaningfully lower. The catch is the higher absolute home values — your dollar tax bill is similar, but the implied rate is better.
Roughly 65% of your tax bill funds the school district. If you don't value the schools, you're not getting your money's worth — choose a different town.
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Who actually buys in Ridgewood
- The Manhattan family with school-aged kids. The most common buyer. Trading their Upper East Side apartment for a four-bedroom Colonial. Often dual finance/law professionals.
- The Bergen County upgrader. Already in Hoboken, Jersey City, or a less-expensive Bergen town. Upgrading for the schools when kids approach K-5.
- The Brooklyn or Westchester transplant. Comparing Westchester County with Bergen — Ridgewood often wins on tax efficiency and walkability.
- The legacy buyer. Adult children of long-time Ridgewood residents buying their first family home where they grew up. A meaningful share of every year's transactions.
Ridgewood vs neighboring towns — the real comparison
- Ridgewood vs Glen Rock: Glen Rock is smaller, slightly less expensive, with its own well-regarded school district. Less walkable downtown, but a tighter community feel.
- Ridgewood vs Wyckoff: Wyckoff is more suburban, larger lots, less walkable. Schools are excellent. Better fit for buyers prioritizing space over town center proximity.
- Ridgewood vs Tenafly: Tenafly is closer to Manhattan via bus, slightly higher taxes, similar school quality. More diverse demographically. Better commute, slightly less walkable downtown.
- Ridgewood vs Montclair: Very different products. Montclair is more diverse, more arts-focused, with shorter commute. Ridgewood is more traditional, with stronger schools by most rankings and a quieter pace.
The mistakes I see every month
Buyers fixating on Ridgewood's name without considering whether the commute actually works for their job. Sellers underestimating how much school catchment affects their specific home's value. Families assuming all Ridgewood elementaries are equivalent — they aren't, and the catchment line matters. And buyers from low-pressure school districts moving here and being surprised by the academic intensity.