About the Morris Plains, NJ real estate market
Morris Plains sits in Morris County, New Jersey. The market here is shaped by three forces: proximity to NYC via Midtown Direct, the local school district, and a housing stock that runs from Morris Plains's historic sections to newer construction pockets.
If you're buying, the main question isn't "is Morris Plains a good town" — it almost always is. The real question is which specific pocket of Morris Plains fits your situation: budget, commute tolerance, school priority, and how much renovation you're willing to take on. Those tradeoffs aren't obvious from a Zillow search. They're what a specialist agent is actually for.
If you're selling in Morris Plains, pricing is everything. Overprice and you burn the first two weeks — the most valuable listing period. Underprice and you leave money on the table. I price against active competition, sold-comp trajectories, and the specific features that move the Morris Plains market (not a generic town-wide median).
Morris Plains neighborhoods I work in
Morris Plains isn't one market — it's several. Each section has its own price dynamics, school feeds, and buyer pool. Here's where I spend the most time:
- Central Morris Plains
- Mountain Way
Tell me which section you're in (or targeting), and I'll pull last-90-day comps for that specific pocket rather than a town-wide average that hides the real signal.
Commuting from Morris Plains to NYC
Morris Plains is served by the Midtown Direct. The primary station is Morris Plains, with a typical Manhattan commute of about 62 minutes to Penn Station or Hoboken (connections vary by train).
What this means for buyers: homes within a 10-minute walk of the station command a meaningful premium over homes that require a drive or shuttle. If the NYC commute is the reason you're moving to Morris Plains, the walkable-to-station home is almost always a better long-term hold — faster to resell, less sensitive to gas-price and ride-service swings.
Ask me for the specific walk-time math before you make an offer. It's the single most underrated pricing factor in Morris County commuter towns.
Morris Plains schools & buyer premiums
The district's GreatSchools rating sits around 8/10. School district lines inside Morris Plains can affect home values by 8-15% between otherwise-identical houses — particularly for families specifically targeting a school feeder pattern.
Before you write an offer, I'll cross-reference the exact property address against the current district map. School zoning changes happen, and last year's assumption can be this year's surprise at closing.
Why homeowners in Morris Plains hire Jorge
- 60+ personal house flips. I've been the buyer, the renovator, and the seller. That means I can tell you inside a walk-through what a kitchen remodel will actually cost, what a pre-list punch list should look like, and which "cosmetic" issues will kill the appraisal.
- Licensed full-time since 2017. NJ Real Estate License #1754604. Full-time agent — not a side hustle. Available nights and weekends during the core of your transaction.
- Keller Williams Premier Properties. Offices in Summit, NJ. KW's technology platform (Command, Kelle, KW Labs) plus my personal AI-powered buyer-targeting system. Your listing gets more qualified eyeballs than a single-agent shop can put on it.
- 138 NJ towns covered. I work across Union, Essex, Morris, Middlesex, Hudson, and Somerset counties — so if your Morris Plains sale is funding a move into a neighboring town, it's the same agent on both sides.
- One honest conversation. No hard close, no "let me send you to my team." If I'm the wrong fit for your specific situation, I'll say so and point you to someone better. That's how referrals work in real estate.
What working with me looks like
Step one: you call or email. We talk for 15–20 minutes about what you're actually trying to do — sell fast, sell for top dollar, find a home under $X, relocate for work, sell an inherited property, handle a divorce sale, whatever it is. No script, no pressure, no "let me get you into our pipeline."
Step two: if we're a fit, I come out to see the property (if you're selling) or we go sit down with a list of comps (if you're buying). You get my honest read — not a sales pitch.
Step three: we work. I show up for the inspection, I handle the negotiation, I cover the paperwork, and I stay available through closing. After closing I'm still your contact for contractors, tax-appeal advice, future sales, whatever you need.
Ready to talk Morris Plains real estate?
One honest conversation. No pressure. That's it.
Morris Plains real estate FAQ
Who is the best real estate agent in Morris Plains, NJ?
Jorge Ramirez is a licensed NJ real estate agent (License #1754604) at Keller Williams Premier Properties who serves Morris Plains and the surrounding Morris County area. Jorge has personally bought, renovated, and sold 60+ investment properties across Northern NJ, giving him working knowledge of renovation costs, buyer behavior, and pricing strategy. Call 908-230-7844 for a free Morris Plains consultation.
What is the average home price in Morris Plains, NJ?
The median home sale price in Morris Plains, NJ is approximately $649K. Prices vary significantly by neighborhood, lot size, school district zoning, and proximity to the train station. For a current comparative market analysis on a specific address, contact Jorge Ramirez at 908-230-7844.
How long do homes take to sell in Morris Plains, NJ?
Homes in Morris Plains, NJ typically spend about 14 days on market from listing to accepted offer, though the actual timeline depends on price positioning, presentation, and seasonality. Well-prepared listings in Morris Plains often receive offers within the first two weeks. For a pricing strategy specific to your home, request a free valuation.
What commission do Morris Plains real estate agents charge?
Real estate commission in NJ is negotiable and typically falls between 4% and 6% of the sale price, usually split between the listing agent and buyer's agent. Since the 2024 NAR settlement, buyer-agent compensation is separately negotiated. Jorge Ramirez offers transparent pricing and will walk you through exactly what you'll pay — call 908-230-7844 to discuss.
How long is the commute from Morris Plains to New York City?
The commute from Morris Plains, NJ to Manhattan is approximately 62 minutes via Midtown Direct. For buyers prioritizing a specific commute time, Jorge can help you identify homes within walking distance of the train station versus those requiring a drive — these are meaningfully different markets.
Is Morris Plains, NJ a good place to buy a house in 2026?
Morris Plains remains a sought-after Morris County market with consistent buyer demand, strong schools, and proximity to NYC employment. Whether it's a good buy depends on your budget, timeline, and which neighborhood fits your situation. Jorge gives direct, unfiltered answers — not sales pitches. Call 908-230-7844.
Does Jorge Ramirez work with first-time home buyers in Morris Plains?
Yes. First-time buyers are a significant part of Jorge's practice. He'll walk you through NJ-specific programs (NJHMFA, down payment assistance), realistic closing-cost math, and what to expect during inspection — so you're not surprised on closing day.
Also serving nearby Morris County towns
If you're cross-shopping Morris Plains against neighboring towns, I can help you compare directly. I also work in: Morristown, Morris Township, Parsippany-Troy Hills, Hanover.
More Morris Plains resources
- Morris Plains, NJ community guide — full market snapshot, schools, neighborhoods, commute details
- Free home valuation — get an instant estimate on your Morris Plains home
- Buyer services — how I work with Morris Plains home buyers
- Seller services — how I list and sell Morris Plains homes
- NJ real estate blog — market updates, buying and selling guides
Verified data sources
Facts on this page cross-reference:
- NJ Real Estate Commission — license verification (#1754604)
- NJ Transit schedules — commute times
- GreatSchools NJ — district ratings
- NJHMFA — first-time buyer programs
- US Census QuickFacts — demographics and housing stats