Weehawken

NJ
Average Sales Price
$1,310,797
Median Sales Price
$999,999
Population
15,338
Total Listings
78
Weehawken NJ – Hyper-Local Block

Richest Town in Hudson County. Hamilton-Burr Duel 1804. Port Imperial Ferry 8 Min to Midtown.
Lincoln Tunnel Portal. $950K-$1M+ Median. 37% Population Growth 2010-2020.

Everything you need to know before making Weehawken, NJ home.

Clifton is one of New Jersey's largest and most genuinely diverse cities — 11.4 square miles, population approximately 90,000, incorporated as a city in Passaic County at 131 feet elevation, 12 miles from Midtown Manhattan. The city is structured as a dense patchwork of distinct neighborhoods — Botany Village, Richfield, Styertowne, Athenia, Montclair Heights, Allwood, and Lakeview — each with its own commercial character and residential identity that reflects successive waves of immigrant settlement from the early 20th century through today. 35.1% of residents were born outside the United States, representing one of Passaic County's most international communities, with significant Latin American, Middle Eastern, South Asian, and Eastern European populations alongside the established Italian-American and Polish-American communities that shaped the city's mid-century character. City-Data: $86,591 median household income (2024); 59.6% homeownership; 28.3-minute average commute; 27% of workers live and work in the city.

The school district — Clifton Public Schools, PreK-12, 20 schools, approximately 10,514 students, 12.1:1 ratio, DFG CD — is one of New Jersey's larger unified districts. Clifton High School (333 Colfax Avenue, Mustangs, Maroon and Gray, established 1906, 3,150 students 2024-25, 14.0:1, Big North Conference, rival: Passaic High School) is the third-largest high school in New Jersey. The market: Redfin $617,500 (+0.4%, November 2025, 63-day DOM, 104.7% sale-to-list); Movoto $599K list (May 2026, 23-day DOM); Zillow ZHVI $514,371 (+6.2%); Houzeo $585,000 (+0.02% YoY). True SFH range approximately $500K-$750K; condos approximately $300K-$450K. The 2024 average tax bill is approximately $10,001 on a 2.1% effective rate. The city sits at the intersection of Route 3, Route 46, I-80, I-280, and the Garden State Parkway — arguably the most highway-accessible residential city of its size in northern New Jersey — with NJ Transit bus service (Routes 190, 191, 192, 74, 75) providing Port Authority access approximately 35-50 minutes.

🛣️
Route 3, Route 46, I-80, GSP — All In-City Most highway-accessible residential city in northern NJ
🌍
35.1% Foreign-Born — Passaic County's Most Diverse City Latin American · Middle Eastern · South Asian · Eastern European
🏫
Clifton HS — 3rd Largest in NJ · DFG CD · 14:1 3,150 students · Mustangs · est. 1906 · Big North Conference
🏡
SFH ~$500K-$750K · Condos ~$300K-$450K Redfin $617K · Movoto $599K · Zillow $514K · 23-day DOM
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~$10,001 Avg Tax Bill · 2.1% Effective Rate City-Data 2024 · $86,591 median HH income · 59.6% homeown.
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7 Distinct Neighborhoods — Each With Its Own Identity Botany Village · Richfield · Styertowne · Athenia · Allwood · more

Getting There From Here

Clifton sits at the convergence of Route 3, Route 46, I-80, I-280, and the Garden State Parkway — the most highway-accessible residential city of its size in northern New Jersey — with NJ Transit bus service to Port Authority and 12 miles to Midtown Manhattan.

NYC Port Authority (Bus)
NJ Transit Routes 190/191/192 · Route 3 corridor
~35-50
minutes by bus
Midtown Manhattan (Car)
Via Route 3 E / Lincoln Tunnel · ~12 miles
~25-40
minutes by car (off-peak)
George Washington Bridge
Via I-80 E / Rt-46 E · ~8 miles
~15-25
minutes by car (off-peak)
Newark Liberty Airport
Via GSP S / I-280 W · ~14 miles
~20-30
minutes by car
Paterson (County Seat)
Via Route 19 N / I-80 W · ~5 miles
~10-15
minutes by car

Education That Raises Property Values

Clifton Public Schools: PreK-12, 20 schools, ~10,514 students, 12.1:1, DFG CD. Clifton HS: 3,150 students, 14.0:1, 3rd largest in NJ, est. 1906, Mustangs, Big North Conference.

School Grades Type Student:Teacher Rating
Elementary Schools (13 schools)
Clifton Public Schools · PreK-5 · DFG CD · 745 Clifton Ave
PreK - 5 Public 12.1 : 1 DFG CD
Middle Schools (5 schools incl. Clifton MS)
Clifton Public Schools · Grades 6-8 · DFG CD
6 - 8 Public 12.1 : 1 DFG CD
Clifton High School
333 Colfax Ave · Mustangs · Maroon & Gray · Est. 1906 · 3,150 students · 3rd largest HS in NJ
9 - 12 Public 14.0 : 1 DFG CD · BNC

Clifton Public Schools: PreK-12 · 20 schools · ~10,514 students (2020-21) · 12.1:1 · DFG CD · Superintendent: Danny A. Robertozzi · 745 Clifton Avenue. Clifton HS: 333 Colfax Avenue · Mustangs · Maroon and Gray · established 1906 · 3,150 students (2024-25) · 14.0:1 · Big North Conference · rival: Passaic HS · 3rd largest HS in NJ · current building opened September 1962 ($6M, equivalent to $64M in 2024). Private options: St. Philip the Apostle (K-8), St. Brendan (K-8). Montclair State University (~10 min) accessible for concurrent enrollment.

What Makes Weehawken Weehawken

Explore Botany Village's Italian-American delis along Van Houten Avenue, Richfield's quiet residential streets, Styertowne's shopping center, Allwood's suburban character, the Passaic River waterfront, and the city where seven distinct neighborhoods share one zip code cluster and one Clifton High School since 1906.

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Botany Village — Italian-American Heritage on Van Houten Avenue
Botany Village along Van Houten Avenue is Clifton's most distinctive neighborhood commercial corridor — the Italian-American heart of the city where multigenerational families have operated delis, pork stores, bakeries, pizzerias, and restaurants since the mid-20th century. The neighborhood reflects the Italian and Eastern European immigrant settlement that gave Clifton its working-class suburban character after World War II. The commercial strip on Van Houten Avenue is authentic, local, and unpretentious — the kind of main street that corporate development hasn't reached because the community never needed it to. Italian ice, Sunday gravy, and the butcher shop that has been there since the 1960s are Botany Village's defining qualities.
Van Houten Ave · Italian-American · Delis · Pork Stores · Bakeries · Multigenerational · Authentic
🌍
Clifton's International Commercial Corridors
With 35.1% of residents born outside the United States, Clifton's commercial corridors reflect one of Passaic County's most genuinely international communities. Main Avenue, Lakeview Avenue, and Paulison Avenue host Latin American restaurants (Colombian, Dominican, Mexican, Peruvian), Middle Eastern bakeries and halal butchers, South Asian grocery stores, Brazilian steakhouses, and Eastern European specialty shops alongside the established Italian and Polish commercial infrastructure. The diversity is not curated for outside visitors — it reflects the actual household composition of a city where five consecutive waves of immigrant settlement have each found affordable homeownership, highway access, and community infrastructure.
Main Ave · Latin American · Middle Eastern · South Asian · Brazilian · Polish · International
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Styertowne Shopping Center & Route 46 Commercial Corridor
Styertowne Shopping Center on Route 46 provides the anchor retail infrastructure — ShopRite, Home Depot, major chain restaurants, and service retail — that serves Clifton's 90,000 residents. The Route 46 commercial corridor extending through the city provides the full range of auto-oriented suburban retail that a dense residential city without a traditional downtown requires. For major format retail, the Garden State Plaza (Paramus) is approximately 15-20 minutes east via Route 3 South, and Willowbrook Mall (Wayne) is approximately 10 minutes west via Route 46.
Styertowne · Route 46 · ShopRite · Home Depot · GSP ~15 min · Willowbrook ~10 min · Retail
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Seven Neighborhoods — One City Identity
Clifton's seven distinct neighborhoods — Botany Village (Italian heritage, Van Houten Ave), Richfield (quiet residential, Route 3 border), Styertowne (shopping corridor, commercial), Athenia (mixed residential, Route 46), Montclair Heights (border with Montclair, elevated terrain), Allwood (suburban residential, quieter streets), and Lakeview (Passaic River adjacent, park access) — each maintain distinct commercial and residential characters while sharing the Clifton High School identity, the Route 3/46/I-80 highway network, and the municipal infrastructure of one of New Jersey's largest cities. Buyers choosing Clifton are effectively choosing which neighborhood character fits their lifestyle while accessing the full city infrastructure.
Botany Village · Richfield · Styertowne · Athenia · Montclair Heights · Allwood · Lakeview
🏛️
Clifton History — Dutch, Industrial, Immigrant, Suburban
Clifton's history traces through four distinct layers: Dutch colonial settlement in the Passaic River valley (1600s-1700s); industrial development along the Passaic River (cotton mills, rubber factories, 1800s-early 1900s); massive immigrant settlement from Southern and Eastern Europe during the 1910s-1950s; and postwar suburban residential expansion that transformed the remaining farmland into the dense neighborhood grid that defines the city today. The current high school building on Colfax Avenue opened in September 1962 at a cost of $6 million (equivalent to $64 million in 2024) — an investment reflecting the scale of the postwar residential expansion. Clifton was incorporated as a city in 1917, separating from Manchester Township.
Incorporated 1917 · Dutch Colonial · Industrial Passaic River · Immigrant Settlement · Suburban 1950s
Clifton Stadium & Mustangs Athletics
Clifton High School's Mustangs compete in the Big North Conference — the same athletic conference as many Bergen County schools — providing a community sports identity that unifies the city's seven neighborhoods. Friday night Mustangs football at Clifton Stadium draws from across the city. The Big North Conference rivalry with Passaic High School is one of northern New Jersey's most historically significant high school athletic rivalries. For a city of 90,000 with one high school, the Mustangs are a genuine cross-community identity anchor in a way that multi-high-school cities cannot replicate.
Clifton Mustangs · Clifton Stadium · Big North Conference · Rival Passaic HS · Community Identity
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Weasel Brook Park — Clifton's Primary Green Spine
Weasel Brook Park runs through central Clifton as the city's primary green corridor — athletic fields, walking paths, picnic areas, and passive recreation serving residents across multiple neighborhoods. The park's linear character connects Allwood and central Clifton residential areas and provides the green infrastructure that a densely built 11.4-square-mile city requires. Youth baseball, soccer, and recreation programs operate from Weasel Brook Park as the primary community athletic hub. The city maintains additional smaller parks throughout all seven neighborhoods, ensuring walkable green space access across the residential grid.
Weasel Brook Park · Athletic Fields · Walking Paths · Picnic · Youth Sports · Central Clifton
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Passaic River Greenway & Lakeview Neighborhood
The Passaic River runs along Clifton's eastern edge, and the Lakeview neighborhood provides the most direct residential access to the river corridor. The Passaic River Greenway trail project — a multi-municipality effort to create continuous trail access along the Passaic River — passes through or adjacent to Clifton, connecting to trail networks in Garfield, Wallington, and the broader Passaic River Valley. For a dense urban city, the Passaic River corridor provides the natural waterway access that the city's residential interior cannot provide.
Passaic River · Lakeview · Greenway Trail · Garfield Border · River Valley Access
🏊
Clifton Municipal Pool & Recreation Programs
Clifton's municipal recreation department operates pools, community centers, and year-round programming serving 90,000 residents across seven neighborhoods. The recreation infrastructure reflects the scale investment appropriate for one of New Jersey's largest cities — adult fitness, youth sports leagues, summer camps, and senior programming at multiple facilities. For a city at $86,591 median household income serving a highly diverse population including 35.1% foreign-born residents, the recreation department's multilingual programming reflects the community's international character.
Municipal Pool · Recreation Centers · Year-Round · Youth Sports · Senior Programs · Multilingual
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St. Joseph's University Medical Center (~5 min) · Hackensack UMC (~20 min)
St. Joseph's University Medical Center (Paterson, ~5 minutes north via I-80) is Passaic County's top hospital and one of northern New Jersey's most significant regional medical centers. St. Joseph's Health serves Clifton's population as the primary hospital. HackensackUMC (~20 minutes east via Route 3/Route 17) provides Bergen County's top hospital as the secondary major option. Montclair State University (~10 minutes southeast) and William Paterson University (~15 minutes north via Route 23) provide higher education access within practical range.
St. Joseph's ~5 min · HackensackUMC ~20 min · Montclair State ~10 min · William Paterson ~15 min
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Clifton Public Library — Main Branch & Branches
Clifton Public Library serves a city of 90,000 with a main branch and additional service points across the seven-neighborhood footprint. With 35.1% of residents born outside the United States and significant communities speaking Spanish, Arabic, Portuguese, Polish, and South Asian languages, the library's multilingual collections, ESL programming, and citizenship preparation resources reflect the city's genuinely international character. The library is a member of the Passaic County library consortium and provides access to the broader regional library network.
Main Branch · Multilingual · ESL Programs · 35% Foreign-Born · Passaic County System
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~$10,001 Average Tax Bill · 2.1% Effective Rate
Clifton's 2024 average residential tax bill of approximately $10,001 (City-Data, 2.1% effective rate) is below Bergen County's average of $13,329 and reflects the Passaic County tax structure for a large urban city. On a $550K home: approximately $7,500-$11,500/year. On a $650K home: approximately $8,900-$13,650. The 2.1% effective rate applied to Clifton's lower assessed values produces the bill; actual effective rates vary by neighborhood. Passaic County tax appeals are filed with the Passaic County Board of Taxation (deadline April 1). Comparisons: Paterson (higher rate, lower assessments), Wayne (lower rate, higher assessments), Passaic (comparable rate). Clifton's tax position relative to its income level ($86,591 median HH) is manageable for working and professional families.
~$10,001 Avg Bill · 2.1% Effective Rate · Below Bergen Avg · Passaic County Board of Taxation
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Passaic County's Most International City — 35.1% Foreign-Born
Clifton's 35.1% foreign-born population represents one of New Jersey's most genuinely international mid-size cities. The successive waves of immigrant settlement — Italian and Polish (1910s-1950s), Latin American (1970s-1990s), Middle Eastern and South Asian (1990s-2010s), and continued international immigration — have produced a city where the cultural geography is visible block by block. Religious institutions include Catholic parishes, Orthodox churches, mosques, Hindu temples, and evangelical congregations, reflecting the full range of the international community. For buyers seeking a city-scale community with true cultural depth at an accessible price point, Clifton delivers that combination at the Passaic County price tier.
35.1% Foreign-Born · Italian · Polish · Latin American · Middle Eastern · South Asian · International
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NJ's Most Highway-Accessible Residential City
Clifton sits at the convergence of Route 3, Route 46, I-80, I-280, and the Garden State Parkway — five major highway/interstate routes within or immediately adjacent to the city boundary. This makes Clifton arguably the most multi-directionally highway-accessible residential city of its size in northern New Jersey. The practical implications: Manhattan 25-40 minutes by car off-peak, Newark Airport 20-30 minutes, Paramus 15-20 minutes, Paterson 10-15 minutes, the entire Route 3 commercial corridor (Secaucus, Kearny, East Rutherford) accessible without a highway construction challenge. For working families who commute by car in multiple directions, Clifton's highway position is a structural quality-of-life asset.
Route 3 · Route 46 · I-80 · I-280 · GSP · 5 Highways · Manhattan ~30 min · Newark Airport ~25 min
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Route 46 & Route 3 Commercial Corridors — In-City Retail
Clifton's primary retail infrastructure runs along Route 46 (Styertowne Shopping Center, Home Depot, ShopRite, major chain restaurants) and Route 3 (auto dealers, big-box retail, service businesses). The city's 90,000 residents support significant in-city commercial activity that most suburban municipalities at this density lack. Main Avenue, Lakeview Avenue, and Van Houten Avenue provide the neighborhood-scale retail — delis, bakeries, pharmacies, dry cleaners, restaurants — that serves daily needs without requiring highway access.
Route 46 Styertowne · Route 3 · ShopRite · Home Depot · Main Ave · Van Houten Ave · In-City
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Willowbrook Mall (~10 min) · Garden State Plaza (~15-20 min)
Willowbrook Mall (Wayne, ~10 minutes west via Route 46 West) provides major format retail, anchored department stores, and dining in the Route 46 commercial corridor. Garden State Plaza (Paramus, ~15-20 minutes east via Route 3 South/Route 17 South) is Bergen County's premier retail destination — Nordstrom, Whole Foods, Bergen Town Center. For Clifton's working families, Willowbrook is the closer primary destination and Garden State Plaza is the premium option. The Route 3 commercial strip from Clifton east through Secaucus provides continuous retail access toward the Lincoln Tunnel.
Willowbrook ~10 min · Garden State Plaza ~15 min · Route 46 · Route 3 · Lincoln Tunnel Corridor
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St. Joseph's University Medical Center (~5 min) · Montclair State (~10 min)
St. Joseph's University Medical Center (Paterson, ~5 minutes north via I-80 West) is Passaic County's most significant regional medical center. For routine and specialist medical care, Clifton residents have some of northern New Jersey's most comprehensive hospital access within 20 minutes in multiple directions: St. Joseph's (Paterson, ~5 min), Hackensack UMC (~20 min east), Mountainside Medical Center (Montclair, ~15 min south), and Valley Hospital (Ridgewood, ~20 min northeast). Montclair State University (~10 min south via Route 3) provides academic medical partnerships and the MSU graduate programs that Clifton's professional community accesses.
St. Joseph's ~5 min · HackensackUMC ~20 min · Mountainside ~15 min · Valley Hospital ~20 min

Weehawken at a Glance

Municipality Type City Passaic County · 11.4 sq mi · inc. 1917 · 131 ft elev.
Population ~88,461-90,296 2nd largest Passaic County · 11th largest NJ · 35.1% foreign-born
Median HH Income $86,591 59.6% homeown. · 28.3 min avg commute · 27% work in-city
SFH Median Price ~$500K-$750K Redfin $617K · Movoto $599K · Zillow $514K · 23-day DOM
Avg Tax Bill ~$10,001 2.1% effective rate · City-Data 2024 · Passaic County
School District DFG CD · 12.1:1 20 schools · Clifton HS 3rd largest NJ · est. 1906
Zip Codes 07011-07015 7 neighborhoods · Route 3/46/I-80/GSP · 12 mi Midtown
Highways Rt 3 · Rt 46 · I-80 · GSP Most highway-accessible residential city in northern NJ

Similar Towns Near Weehawken

Buyers considering Clifton often explore these neighboring Passaic and Bergen County communities — from adjacent Wayne and Passaic to Garfield, Lodi, and Woodland Park, all within 15 minutes.

Demographics

Data provided by Attom Data
Population
Employment
Population
15.3K
15.3K in 2020
Density
8.8K
per square mile
Households
7.2K
23 With Children
Gender
49% / 51%
Men Vs Women
Occupancy
35% / 65%
Owned Vs Rented
Age Median: -- Years
No Data
Education Level
No Data

Educational Environment

Elementary Schools (3)Middle Schools (2)High Schools (1)
Name
Category
Grades
Library
Ratio
10/10
Woodrow Wilson Elementary School
80 Hauxhurst Ave, Weehawken, NJ 07086
Public
1 - 8
No
19:1 STUDENTS/TEACHERS
5/10
Theodore Roosevelt Elementary School
1 Louisa Pl, Weehawken, NJ 07086
Public
3 - 6
No
14:1 STUDENTS/TEACHERS
0/10
Daniel Webster Elementary School
2700 Palisade Ave, Weehawken, NJ 07086
Public
PK - 2
No
14:1 STUDENTS/TEACHERS
Name
Category
Grades
Library
Ratio
10/10
Woodrow Wilson Elementary School
80 Hauxhurst Ave, Weehawken, NJ 07086
Public
1 - 8
No
19:1 STUDENTS/TEACHERS
5/10
Weehawken High School
53 Liberty Pl, Weehawken, NJ 07086
Public
7 - 12
No
10:1 STUDENTS/TEACHERS
Name
Category
Grades
Library
Ratio
5/10
Weehawken High School
53 Liberty Pl, Weehawken, NJ 07086
Public
7 - 12
No
10:1 STUDENTS/TEACHERS

Amenities & Attractions

Restaurants
Home Services
Health & Medical
Local Services
Shopping
Recreation
Arts & Entertainment
Food
Beauty
Nightlife
Event Planning & Services
Automotive
Religious Organizations
Financial Services
Professional Services
Travel
Pets
Education
Local Media
Public Services & Government
  • Michael’s Wings & Pizza

    1822 Willow Ave, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Pizza Phone: 201-766-2635

  • Denise Grocery Deli

    4522 Park Ave, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Delis Phone: 201-867-3777

  • Marco Polo Pizza

    1200 Harbor Blvd Ste 135, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Chinese Phone: 201-863-0057

  • Pizza Hut

    4800 Park Ave, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Pizza Phone: 201-974-1100

  • Flaming Pizza

    4206 Park Ave, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Pizza Phone: 201-624-8300

  • Boogie Woogie Bagel Boys

    1200 Harbor Blvd, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    American (Traditional) Phone: 201-863-4666

  • El Charro

    974 Blvd E, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Mexican Phone: 201-330-1130

  • Romano Pizza

    4206 Park Ave, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Pizza Phone: 201-624-8300

  • Spirit of New Jersey

    Lincoln Harbor Marina, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Boat Charters Phone: 866-483-3866

  • Molos

    1 Pershing Rd, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Greek Phone: 201-223-1200

  • Bravo Pizza

    1200 Harbor Blvd, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Pizza Phone: 201-865-3817

  • Linda’s Place

    1 Potter Pl, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Delis Phone: 201-392-8208

  • Pollo Kokorico

    4208 Park Ave, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Phone: 201-348-4646

  • Robongi Weehawken

    4800 Ave At Port Imperial Blvd, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Sushi Bars Phone: 201-558-1818

  • Hi-So Thai

    1903 Willow Ave, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Thai Phone: 201-902-0991

  • Kawabae Japanese Restaurant

    974 Boulevard E, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Japanese Phone: 201-867-5694

  • Taste Deli

    4536 Park Ave, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Delis Phone: 201-770-0200

  • Tejeda Mini Market

    122 Maple St, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Sandwiches Phone: 201-867-2009

  • Daily Chinese Restaurant

    4210 Park Ave, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Chinese Phone: 201-865-2273

  • Mj Atm Machine Svc

    4536 Park Ave, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Sandwiches Phone: 201-770-0207

  • Mediterranean Grill

    1200 Harbor Blvd, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Mediterranean

  • Hudson Blue Bar & View

    4800 Port Imperial Blvd, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Sushi Bars Phone: 201-348-3200

  • Third Avenue Deli

    1200 Harbor Blvd, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Pizza Phone: 201-865-3817

  • Chart House

    Lincoln Harbor, Pier D-T, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Seafood Phone: 201-348-6628

  • Subway

    1200 Harbor Blvd, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Fast Food Phone: 201-865-2500

  • Arthur’s Downtown

    1 Pershing Rd, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Phone: 973-286-1700

  • Ristorante Rigoletto

    3706 Park Ave, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Phone: 201-325-8300

  • Frutiland Shakes & Grill Cafe

    4530 Park Ave, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Phone: 201-330-8882

  • Number One Chinese Restaraunt

    2504 Palisade Ave, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Chinese Phone: 201-617-5349

  • No. 1 Chinese Restaurant

    2504 Palisade Ave, Weehawken, NJ 07086

    Chinese Phone: 201-617-5349

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Weehawken, NJ -- Frequently Asked Questions

Real answers about buying, selling, taxes, schools, and daily life in Weehawken -- Hudson County's richest township: ~17,197 residents (+37% growth 2010-2020), Hamilton-Burr duel July 11 1804, Lincoln Tunnel NJ portal (I-495), Port Imperial NY Waterway ferry (8 min to W. Midtown), two-experience township (uptown hillside + Port Imperial waterfront luxury), $950K-$1M+ median, luxury waterfront $1.5M-$5M+, $12,942 median tax bill, 1.86% effective, PILOT check for new construction, inc. 1859.

Weehawken is Hudson County's highest-priced residential market and the richest town in the county. Jill Biggs Group (2026): $950,000-$1,012,000 median; high-demand seller's market; limited inventory, strong appreciation. Homes.com: $925,000 (+5%). Movewithmoreng: avg sale $982,886 (last 30 days), 27 new listings, 63-day avg DOM. Redfin: ~$950K median list, 92-day DOM, 3 offers, 8 monthly sales. Ownwell: highest median home price in Hudson County at $700,900 (assessed; market significantly higher). Price tiers: uptown hillside homes (tree-lined streets, single-family) $800K-$1.5M; Port Imperial luxury condos $1.5M-$5M+ (Avora, Henley on Hudson, 1200 Avenue at Port Imperial); townhouses mid-slope $700K-$1.2M. Population grew 37% from 2010 to 2020 -- entirely driven by Port Imperial waterfront development. Ownwell: Weehawken has the highest median home price ($700,900 assessed) in all of Hudson County. Talk to us about Weehawken market conditions
Weehawken has the best Manhattan commute options in all of New Jersey. NY Waterway ferry from Port Imperial Terminal: direct service to West Midtown Ferry Terminal (W. 38th St) in approximately 8-12 minutes -- the fastest Hudson County commute to Midtown by any mode. Direct service also to Lower Manhattan/Brookfield Place. Multiple departures per hour during peak commute. Walking distance from most Port Imperial condo buildings. Hudson-Bergen Light Rail: Port Imperial Station on HBLR (via the West Shore Railroad Tunnel through the Palisades cliffs), connecting north to North Bergen and south through Union City, Hoboken, Jersey City, Bayonne. Lincoln Tunnel (I-495): the western portal runs directly through Weehawken. Off-peak, Midtown Manhattan is 5-15 minutes by car. During peak hours, the Tunnel Helix backs up -- serious Weehawken residents use the ferry. NJ Transit bus: multiple routes on Boulevard East to Port Authority. The ferry is not a commute supplement -- for Port Imperial residents, it is the primary commute mode. 8 minutes to Midtown is a city block in practical terms.
Ownwell: 1.86% effective rate; $12,942 median annual bill. Range: 25th percentile $8,201; 75th percentile $17,014; 90th percentile $25,817. On a $975K home at 1.86%: approximately $18,135/year. On a $1.5M waterfront condo: approximately $27,900/year. For context: Hoboken at 1.07% on $975K = $10,433; Weehawken at 1.86% on $975K = $18,135. The rate premium over Hoboken reflects Weehawken's smaller commercial tax base and higher-value residential properties. PILOT arrangements: Port Imperial and newer waterfront developments may have PILOT status -- verify for any new-construction purchase. PILOTs reduce the annual bill significantly during the term; at expiration, taxes revert to standard rates. Always confirm PILOT status and term remaining. Hudson County Board of Taxation for appeals.
Exceptional seller's market. Limited supply, strong appreciation, the highest prices in Hudson County. Key selling messages: Richest town in Hudson County ($700,900 highest assessed median, Ownwell); Port Imperial NY Waterway ferry (8 min to W. Midtown -- fastest in NJ); Lincoln Tunnel NJ portal (I-495) in-township; HBLR Port Imperial Station (West Shore Railroad Tunnel through Palisades); $950K-$1M+ median; luxury waterfront $1.5M-$5M+ (Avora, Henley on Hudson, 1200 Avenue); 37% population growth 2010-2020; Alexander Hamilton-Aaron Burr duel July 11 1804 (Hamilton Park monument + observation deck); Boulevard East panoramic skyline views (Manhattan from GWB to Lower Manhattan); 9/11 memorial with Twin Tower trident beams on waterfront; Weehawken Waterfront Park (pool, athletic fields, playground, rec center opened 2021); Reservoir Park (2015, former reservoir); uptown hillside = quiet residential streets; two-experience township; Hudson River Waterfront Walkway; Dutch settlement c. 1647 (Maryn Adriaensen patent 169 acres); inc. 1859; 947.2 acres total; Lenape name (corn land or trees/mills). The ferry-to-Midtown-in-8-minutes argument is unmatched in all of New Jersey. Get a free Weehawken home valuation
Weehawken is a two-experience township. The first experience is the hillside -- uptown, tree-lined streets, traditional residential neighborhood, quiet in a way that buyers from Hoboken's Washington Street corridor find unexpectedly appealing, Boulevard East panoramic views of the Manhattan skyline stretching from the George Washington Bridge to Lower Manhattan. The second experience is the waterfront -- Port Imperial, where the NY Waterway ferry terminal opened in 2006, where Avora and Henley on Hudson and 1200 Avenue at Port Imperial have delivered luxury condos with 24/7 concierge and private shuttle to the ferry, where 8 minutes on the water gets you to West Midtown. Between these two experiences, the Lincoln Tunnel's I-495 Helix runs through the center of the township and connects to Manhattan. The western portal of the Lincoln Tunnel is in Weehawken. At a bend in the Palisades above the Hudson, Alexander Hamilton was fatally shot by Aaron Burr on July 11, 1804 -- Hamilton Park has the monument and the observation deck. The Dutch settled this land in 1647 when Maryn Adriaensen received a patent for 169 acres. The township was incorporated in 1859. The 9/11 memorial along the waterfront has trident-shaped beams from the Twin Towers. The West Shore Railroad Tunnel, carved through the Palisades cliffs, carries the HBLR. Weehawken's population grew 37% from 2010 to 2020 -- all of it at the waterfront, none of it in the hillside that has been quietly expensive since before anyone started calling the Hudson County Gold Coast a thing.

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