Bergen & Passaic County

New Construction Homes in Northern New Jersey

Buying new isn't buying used. Different process, different contract, different people across the table. Here's what's available — and what to know before you sign.

Why New Construction Is Its Own Thing

Northern New Jersey's housing stock skews old. Bergen and Passaic are full of homes built decades ago — which is exactly why new construction stands out here, and why buyers gravitate toward it. No previous owner's choices to undo. No thirty-year-old systems. Everything to current code.

But a new-construction purchase isn't a resale with better appliances. The process is genuinely different, and the differences catch people who assume they already know how buying a home works.

How It Differs From a Resale

Four things that surprise buyers coming from the resale market.

The Contract

Builders typically use their own contract, not the standard realtor form. That changes what attorney review looks like — and makes it matter more, not less.

The Timeline

You may be buying something that doesn't exist yet. Completion dates move. That has to be planned around, not assumed.

Upgrades & Selections

The base price is rarely the final price. What's standard versus what's an upgrade is where budgets quietly grow.

Warranty, Not Disclosure

There's no seller who lived there to disclose anything. Instead you get a builder warranty — and the terms of it are worth reading closely.

The Thing Buyers Get Wrong

The person in the model home works for the builder.

This is the single most important thing to understand about buying new construction. That friendly, knowledgeable, genuinely helpful person walking you through the model? They represent the builder. Not you.

That's not a criticism — it's their job, and most do it well. But their obligation runs to the seller. When you're negotiating upgrades, timelines, or what happens if the completion date slips, you want someone whose obligation runs to you.

And here's what most buyers don't realize: in most cases, bringing your own representation costs you nothing extra — but you generally have to register your agent on your first visit. Walk in alone and you may forfeit the right to be represented on that community entirely. It's worth a phone call before you tour.

Available Now

New Construction in Bergen & Passaic

Current new-construction listings across both counties, updated from the MLS.

Browse by Town

Dedicated new-construction pages for the towns we know best.

Before You Tour a Model Home

Five things worth doing first.

  • Register your agent on the first visit — not the second. Many builders won't allow representation retroactively.
  • Ask what's standard vs. upgrade — in writing. The model home is usually loaded with options.
  • Get the completion date and what happens if it slips — delays are normal; unplanned delays are expensive.
  • Read the warranty — what's covered, for how long, and who you call.
  • Plan on your own inspection — new doesn't mean flawless. Have someone look before you close.

Yes, You Should Still Inspect It

This is the one buyers push back on. It's brand new — what's there to inspect?

Plenty. New homes are built fast, by many hands, under deadline. Things get missed. An independent inspection before closing is your only chance to have items addressed while the builder still has every incentive to address them. Once you've closed, you're in warranty-claim territory, which is a slower and more frustrating road. Our home inspection page covers what inspectors look for.

The Contract Is Not the Standard Form

Most New Jersey resale purchases run on a realtor-prepared standard form — which is what triggers attorney review. Builders generally use their own contracts instead, drafted by their attorneys, for their benefit. That's not sinister; it's how it works. But it means having your own attorney look at it isn't a formality — it's the whole ballgame.

If It Needs Work Instead

New construction isn't the only path to a home that fits. If you're weighing a resale that needs updating, financing the purchase and the improvements together is a real option — see our renovation loan guide.

New Construction FAQs

Do I need my own agent to buy new construction?
You don't have to have one — but the person in the model home represents the builder, not you. Having your own representation means someone's obligation runs to your interests when you're negotiating upgrades, timelines, and what happens if completion slips. In most cases it costs you nothing extra, though you generally need to register your agent on your first visit to the community.
Should I get a home inspection on a brand-new house?
Yes. New homes are built quickly by many trades under deadline pressure, and things get missed. An independent inspection before closing is your best opportunity to have issues corrected while the builder is still motivated to correct them. After closing, you're relying on the warranty process, which is slower.
Is the builder's contract the same as a normal home purchase contract?
Usually not. Most New Jersey resales use a realtor-prepared standard form, which is what triggers the attorney review period. Builders typically use their own contract, drafted by their attorneys. That makes having your own attorney review it especially important, since the standard protections you'd expect may not be there by default.
Why is the final price higher than the base price?
Because the model home you toured is usually loaded with upgrades, and the base price reflects standard finishes. The gap between what's standard and what's an upgrade is where new-construction budgets quietly expand. Getting that list in writing early is one of the most useful things you can do.
Where can I find new construction in Bergen and Passaic County?
New-construction inventory in Northern New Jersey moves and varies by town. The listings on this page pull current new builds across Bergen and Passaic from the MLS, and we maintain dedicated pages for Oakland and Franklin Lakes. If you're targeting a specific town or community, we can watch it for you directly.

Thinking About Building New?

Call us before you tour — that first visit matters more than most buyers realize. No obligation.

📞 (201) 240-5200 ✉️ Email the Team

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