Emerson offers a charming suburban atmosphere with tree-lined streets and a strong sense of community. Residents enjoy easy access to parks, recreational facilities, and top-rated schools, making it an ideal place for families. The vibrant downtown area features local shops and dining options, enhancing the small-town feel. With its convenient location near major highways and public transportation, commuting to nearby cities is a breeze, adding to the appeal for professionals seeking a peaceful retreat.
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Average Sales Price
$857,528
Median Sales Price
$798,500
Population
8,474
Total Listings
26
Emerson NJ – Hyper-Local Block
Living in Emerson
"The Family Town." Pascack Valley Line. Walkable Main Street. Named for Emerson.
Everything you need to know before making Emerson, NJ home.
Emerson takes its name seriously. Incorporated in 1903 as the Borough of Etna — named for a local train station — residents voted in 1909 to rename it after Ralph Waldo Emerson, the philosopher and essayist who championed self-reliance, community, and the examined life. The borough has been calling itself "The Family Town" ever since, and the nickname earns its keep. At 2.42 square miles in the Pascack Valley — Bergen County's most idyllic suburban corridor — Emerson is a borough of roughly 7,290 residents that operates at the kind of human scale where people actually know their neighbors, kids ride bikes to parks, and the holiday tree lighting brings the whole town out to the fire station for hot chocolate with Santa.
Practically, Emerson offers a genuinely compelling package: the NJ Transit Pascack Valley Line train station sits on Kinderkamack Road, connecting directly to Hoboken in approximately 35–45 minutes. The borough runs its own PreK–12 district with a remarkable 9.3:1 ratio at the high school. The median home is approximately $740K–$765K. Main Street is genuinely walkable — a latte shop at one end, an organic vegetable farm at the other. Emerson Woods nature preserve sits right on Main Street. This is small-town Bergen County done right.
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Pascack Valley Line — In-BoroughDirect train to Hoboken ~35–45 min · NYC access
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Own PreK–12 District · 9.3:1 HS RatioExceptional student-teacher ratio · GH district
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Emerson Woods & Centennial ParkNature preserve on Main St · parks · Pascack Brook
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"The Family Town"~7,290 residents · walkable Main St · safe · engaged
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Pascack Valley MarketMedian ~$740K–$765K · single-family · stable
Emerson is a commuter's borough — the Pascack Valley Line train station on Kinderkamack Road provides direct rail access to Hoboken and NYC, complemented by Route 17 and bus service.
Hoboken Terminal
NJ Transit Pascack Valley Line · Emerson Station
~35–45
minutes by train
NYC (Penn Station via transfer)
Pascack Valley Line → Secaucus Junction → Penn
~55–65
minutes by train
George Washington Bridge
Via Rt-17 S / Kinderkamack Rd
~25–30
minutes by car (off-peak)
Paramus / Garden State Plaza
Via Kinderkamack Rd / Rt-17 S · ~5 miles
~10
minutes by car
Newark Liberty Airport
Via Rt-17 S / I-80 E / NJ Tpk · ~25 miles
~30
minutes by car
Public Schools
Education That Raises Property Values
Emerson runs its own PreK–12 district with three schools, 1,085 students, and an exceptional 9.3:1 student-teacher ratio at Emerson Junior-Senior High School — one of the best ratios in Bergen County.
School
Grades
Type
Student:Teacher
Rating
Memorial School Emerson School District · PreK–Grade 2
PreK – 2
Public
11 : 1
B+
Villano School Emerson School District · Grades 3–6
3 – 6
Public
11 : 1
B+
Emerson Junior-Senior High School 131 Main St · Grades 7–12 · 440 students · Cavaliers
7 – 12
Public
9.3 : 1
B+
Emerson School District: District Factor Group GH · 3 schools · 1,085 students · 11:1 overall ratio. Emerson Jr/Sr HS: 9.3:1 ratio — one of Bergen County's best. Cavaliers ("Cavos") compete in the North Jersey Interscholastic Conference. Bergen County Academies also eligible.
Neighborhood Life
What Makes Emerson Emerson
Explore the walkable Main Street, Emerson Woods, Pascack Valley parks, and genuine small-town community culture that give Emerson its irreplaceable "Family Town" character.
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Main Street Cafés & Shops
Emerson's walkable Main Street runs the full range — from a coffee shop at one end to local boutiques and restaurants throughout. Residents describe it as the kind of street where you can actually run into your neighbors on a Saturday morning and end up staying for an hour.
Walkable · Main St · Local
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Organic Farm (Main Street)
A working organic vegetable farm accessible at one end of Main Street — a genuine Emerson quirk that reflects the borough's Pascack Valley character and its "Family Town" identity. Residents can pick their own vegetables in season, a rarity in a densely suburban Bergen County context.
Farm · Organic · Pick-Your-Own
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Local Restaurants & BYOBs
Emerson has a selection of neighborhood restaurants — Italian, casual American, and local BYOBs — that serve the borough's residents without requiring a drive to Westwood or Paramus for a weeknight dinner. Niche specifically notes "a lot of restaurants" as a community amenity.
Italian · BYOB · Neighborhood
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Westwood & Paramus (~10 min)
Neighboring Westwood's charming downtown and Paramus's retail corridor — including Garden State Plaza — are both approximately 10 minutes away. Emerson's central Pascack Valley location gives residents easy access to a full commercial radius without being adjacent to highway commercial strips.
~10 min · Full Retail Access
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Annual Holiday Tree Lighting
The Annual Holiday Tree Lighting Ceremony — with hot chocolate and Santa at the fire station — is the borough's signature community event. It sounds quaint because it is, intentionally: Emerson's civic identity is built around exactly this kind of gathering, and residents who've experienced it rarely forget it.
Annual Tradition · Community Heart
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Soldier Hill Golf Club
A golf course straddling the Emerson-Oradell border, opened 1963, set near the Oradell Reservoir. A beloved local amenity for residents who want weekend golf minutes from home without driving to a regional club.
Golf · In-Borough · Oradell Reservoir
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Emerson Woods
A vast natural preserve right on Main Street — Emerson's most distinctive green space, offering walking trails through preserved woodland in the heart of the borough. The combination of a walkable nature preserve and a walkable main street on the same road is genuinely unusual and defines Emerson's character.
Nature Preserve · Main Street · Trails
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Centennial Park
At the other end of Main Street from Emerson Woods — a community park with fields and open space that anchors the residential neighborhoods south of Main Street. The pairing of Emerson Woods at one end and Centennial Park at the other gives Main Street its green bookend character.
Community Park · Green Space
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Pascack Brook & Oradell Reservoir
Pascack Brook flows along Emerson's western edge — a natural water feature that contributes to the borough's leafy, open character. The Oradell Reservoir is just minutes away, providing the preserved open space and natural setting that defines the Pascack Valley aesthetic.
Brook · Reservoir · Natural
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Little League & Youth Sports
Emerson's youth sports culture is central to "The Family Town" identity — Little League baseball on Friday nights is a borough institution. The combination of small-town population (~7,290) and high owner-occupied family density creates an unusually engaged sports and recreation community.
Little League · Youth Sports · Community
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Emerson Public Library
Part of the Bergen County Cooperative Library System — access to 77 member libraries, hundreds of thousands of titles, digital resources, and museum passes. In a borough named for a writer-philosopher who championed lifelong learning, the library holds particular civic significance.
Civic · BCCLS · Named for Emerson
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Named for Ralph Waldo Emerson
In 1909, residents voted to rename the Borough of Etna after Ralph Waldo Emerson — the transcendentalist philosopher, essayist, and poet who championed self-reliance, community, and the examined life. The choice reflects a genuine civic aspiration that the borough has honored for over a century. It is one of the few municipalities in New Jersey named for a literary figure.
Named for RWE · Literary Heritage · 1909
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"The Family Town" — Earned, Not Marketed
Emerson's "Family Town" nickname is not a tourism slogan — it appears on the borough's own website and is backed by data: overwhelmingly owner-occupied, high family household concentration, deeply engaged youth sports culture, active volunteer programs, and a civic calendar anchored by community traditions. The borough operates at a human scale that most Bergen County towns have long since outgrown.
Family · Owner-Occupied · Engaged
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Train Station Since 1870
Emerson station opened on March 4, 1870 — making it one of Bergen County's longest-serving commuter rail stops. The Pascack Valley Line has connected Emerson to Hoboken and ultimately Manhattan for over 150 years, shaping the borough's identity as a commuter community from its very beginning.
Station Since 1870 · Pascack Valley · History
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Main Street Emerson
Emerson's walkable Main Street provides everyday essentials — boutiques, coffee shops, the organic farm, local services, and neighborhood restaurants accessible on foot from most residential addresses. For a borough of 7,290 people, the in-borough commercial amenity is genuinely above average.
Walkable · In-Borough · Main St
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Westwood & Paramus (~10 min)
Westwood's charming downtown is minutes away; Paramus retail — Garden State Plaza, Bergen Town Center — approximately 10 minutes east on Kinderkamack Road. Emerson's Pascack Valley location gives excellent regional retail access without living adjacent to commercial sprawl.
~10 min · Westwood · Paramus
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Valley Hospital & HMH Pascack Valley
Valley Hospital in Ridgewood and HackensackUMC Pascack Valley Medical Center in Westwood are both within approximately 15 minutes — two strong regional healthcare systems serving the Pascack Valley corridor. Bergen Community College (~10 min) rounds out educational and professional service access.
Healthcare · ~15 min · Dual Systems
By the Numbers
Emerson at a Glance
Municipality TypeBoroughBergen County · Pascack Valley · 2.42 sq mi
Population~7,2902020 Census · "The Family Town"
Median Home Price~$740K–$765KStable appreciating market
Avg Tax Bill~$14,7003.420% rate · 2024 average
Train to Hoboken~35–45 minPascack Valley Line · in-borough station
HS S:T Ratio9.3 : 1One of Bergen Co.'s best · 440 students
Zip Code07630Single zip borough
Named ForRalph Waldo EmersonRenamed 1909 · philosopher/essayist
Explore the Area
Similar Towns Near Emerson
Buyers considering Emerson often explore these neighboring Pascack Valley and Bergen County communities.
Real answers about buying, selling, taxes, schools, and daily life in Emerson — Bergen County's "Family Town," named for Ralph Waldo Emerson, with an in-borough Pascack Valley Line train station and a 9.3:1 high school student-teacher ratio.
Emerson is a somewhat competitive, stable Pascack Valley market. Redfin reported a median sale of $765K in October 2025 (slightly down 1.9% YoY — low volume affects monthly comparisons). An insider guide reports median around $740K as of early 2025, up approximately 6% over the prior year. Movoto lists a current median around $863K (February 2026). Days on market average 19–78 days depending on season and property. Homes frequently sell above list — Redfin shows a 103% sale-to-list ratio, with hot homes selling 9% over asking. The borough draws consistent demand from families specifically seeking the Pascack Valley lifestyle with in-borough train access. Talk to us about current Emerson market conditions →
Emerson's median home price is approximately $740K–$865K depending on source and season. The insider guide median of $740K (early 2025, up ~6% YoY) and Redfin's $765K (Oct 2025) represent mid-range data points; Movoto's $863K list price (Feb 2026) reflects current asking prices. Because Emerson is a low-volume market — only a handful of homes sell per month — individual sales move the median significantly. The practical range: smaller ranches and capes start around $600K–$700K; updated colonials on larger lots run $750K–$1M+; larger newer homes push $1M–$1.3M. Almost all inventory is single-family detached.
Emerson is almost entirely single-family detached homes — the Pascack Valley suburb as originally designed. The housing stock spans post-WWII ranches and split-levels, 1960s–70s colonials, and newer construction on the borough's limited remaining buildable land. Lots are generally generous by Bergen County standards — typically a quarter acre or more — contributing to the spacious suburban character. There are no high-rises, very limited multifamily, and essentially no condos. The borough is overwhelmingly owner-occupied. For buyers seeking the classic Bergen County family home experience — large lot, quiet street, walkable neighborhood, train access — Emerson consistently delivers it.
Emerson is a commuter-rail borough — the train is the defining commute option. The NJ Transit Pascack Valley Line stops at Emerson Station (170 Kinderkamack Road, opened 1870) and provides direct service to Hoboken Terminal in approximately 35–45 minutes. From Hoboken, PATH connects to lower Manhattan in minutes; NY Waterway ferries go to Midtown. For Penn Station, connect at Secaucus Junction — total trip approximately 55–65 minutes. By car, Route 17 South connects to the GWB in approximately 25–30 minutes off-peak, with Midtown Manhattan roughly 40–45 minutes. Newark Airport is approximately 30 minutes south. The borough is about 24–25 miles from NYC. A local source describes it as: 40–45 minutes to Midtown by car in light traffic.
Emerson runs its own PreK–12 district — three schools, 1,085 students, 11:1 overall ratio, District Factor Group GH. Memorial School (PreK–2) and Villano School (Grades 3–6) feed into Emerson Junior-Senior High School (Grades 7–12). The high school has 440 students and a 9.3:1 student-teacher ratio — one of the best in Bergen County and exceptional for a public high school at any level. The Cavaliers ("Cavos") compete in the North Jersey Interscholastic Conference. Niche rates the public schools as "highly rated." District Factor Group GH reflects a higher socioeconomic profile. Bergen County Academies (Hackensack) are also accessible for qualifying students. For families who value genuine individual attention and small class sizes over top-10 rankings, Emerson's school profile is genuinely hard to match at this price point.
Emerson's general tax rate is 3.420% and the 2024 average annual tax bill is approximately $14,700 — higher than the Bergen County average of $13,329. On a $750K home, expect approximately $20,000–$25,000 per year depending on assessed value. This is meaningfully higher than neighboring Westwood (~$11,500 average) and reflects the cost of maintaining Emerson's own complete PreK–12 district, full municipal services, and the quality of infrastructure that supports "The Family Town" identity. The high school's 9.3:1 ratio and small district size are partly funded by this tax base. Tax bills are due quarterly: February 1, May 1, August 1, and November 1.
Emerson's average tax bill of approximately $14,700 is notably higher than neighboring Westwood (~$11,500) and most other Pascack Valley towns. This is the key financial trade-off of choosing Emerson over, say, Westwood or Park Ridge. The justification is in what the taxes fund: Emerson's own complete PreK–12 district with a 9.3:1 high school ratio rather than a shared regional district. Families who place strong value on small class sizes and individual attention at the high school level — and who have compared the Emerson Jr/Sr HS ratio against larger regional schools — frequently conclude the premium is justified. Buyers who are more rate-sensitive and less school-driven by ratio specifically may find better value in Westwood or River Vale with comparable Pascack Valley lifestyle benefits.
Yes. Emerson benefits from consistent structural demand from families specifically seeking the Pascack Valley lifestyle with an in-borough train station and a small-district school system. Homes are selling at 103% of list price on average, with hot homes reaching 109% of list. The buyer pool for Emerson is deliberate — families who have specifically chosen this borough over Westwood, Oradell, or River Vale — and they are motivated. Spring (March–May) is the strongest selling window, aligned with school-year relocation timing. Get a free Emerson home valuation →
Emerson homes average approximately 19–78 days on market depending on season and property type. Movoto reports 19 days for the most recent period; Redfin's broader average is around 78 days. The wide range reflects low transaction volume — a small number of homes selling per month makes averages volatile. Well-priced, well-presented spring listings on good lots in the residential neighborhoods can go pending in under 30 days. The Emerson buyer is highly specific — a family that has chosen this borough deliberately — so the marketing should speak directly to the 9.3:1 school ratio, the in-borough train, and the "Family Town" community character. Learn how we sell homes in Emerson →
Emerson operates at a human scale that most Bergen County towns can no longer claim. The borough's own website describes it best: enjoy a latte at one end of Main Street and pick your own organic vegetables on the other side. Catch a Little League baseball game on Friday night. Explore Emerson Woods nature preserve. Picnic in Centennial Park. Bundle up for the Annual Holiday Tree Lighting and warm your hands on hot chocolate with Santa at the fire station. None of this is manufactured tourism copy — it's the actual arc of life here for a community of 7,290 people who have chosen to live in a borough named for a philosopher of self-reliance and community. The train to Hoboken takes 35–45 minutes. Paramus is 10 minutes away. The high school has 440 students and a 9.3:1 ratio. For families who want Bergen County done at its most genuine and human scale, Emerson is one of the most consistent long-term choices in the Pascack Valley.
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