Gloucester County at a glance
- About 16% of the county is in the Pinelands, mainly in Franklin and Monroe (Williamstown).
- The county is not in the CAFRA coastal zone.
- Wastewater is handled by the Gloucester County Utilities Authority (GCUA).
- A mix of farmland and fast-growing suburbs makes splittable lots and infill parcels common here.
What land do you buy in Gloucester County?
We buy farm fields, wooded acreage, and vacant lots across Franklin, Monroe, Harrison (Mullica Hill), Glassboro, and the surrounding townships. As the suburbs spread, we also work with owners who want to split off and sell part of a larger property.
How do the Pinelands affect Gloucester County land?
The Pinelands cover the eastern townships, especially Franklin and Monroe, where management areas shape what can be built and parcels may carry development credits. The rest of the county runs on ordinary municipal zoning.
Common reasons people sell here
Inherited farm ground, vacant lots behind on taxes, and homeowners with extra acreage that could become a building lot. We handle all of these. See farmland rollback taxes if your land is farm-assessed.
Towns and areas we buy in
We buy throughout Gloucester County: the Pinelands townships of Franklin and Monroe (Williamstown), the farm and crossroads communities of Harrison (Mullica Hill), Elk, South Harrison, and Woolwich, and the more developed areas around Glassboro, Deptford, Washington Township, Mantua, and Clayton. Farm fields, wooded acreage, and infill lots all count.
Common Gloucester County land situations
As the suburbs spread, we work with owners who want to split off and sell part of a large lot, plus inherited farm ground, farm-assessed parcels, and land behind on taxes. We also buy commercial land.
Sources
- Pinelands acreage by county - NJ Pinelands Commission / Pinelands Alliance facts.
- Gloucester County Utilities Authority - gcua.com.