
Most buyers shopping the Greater Boston market hear two town names and assume they're roughly comparable. They aren't. Cross a county line in this region and the same square footage, the same school-district reputation, even the same commute can sit at materially different price points — sometimes for very real reasons, sometimes for legacy ones that haven't caught up to the data.
Here's what the line actually does, and when it should change how you write your offer.
The Mike Hughes Team works across Middlesex, Essex, Norfolk, and Suffolk counties. Each has its own assessor offices, its own registry of deeds, and its own mix of housing stock — but the practical pricing differences come from three drivers, not from county borders themselves.
Different counties = different registry of deeds offices. Pulling deed history, mortgage history, or prior sale data for a Lynnfield property (Essex County) means searching the Essex Southern District Registry. The same kind of search for a Reading property (Middlesex County, but bordering Lynnfield) routes through Middlesex Southern. If you're doing pre-offer due diligence on prior sales or financing patterns, you need to know which registry to query — and small mistakes can mean missing recent transfers.
Permits are filed at the municipal level (city/town building inspector), not the county. So the county line doesn't change your permit research — but the cross-county comparison work in a CMA does. A Boston (Suffolk) comp pulled from the Boston ISD permit database doesn't tell you anything about a Lynnfield (Essex) target unless the buyer's agent and listing agent both understand each town's permit norms.
Each town sets its own assessment cycle. Some towns reassess on a three-year cycle; others annually. When you're using the assessed value as a sanity-check on a list price, you need to know how stale that town's assessment is — and that's a town-by-town fact, not a county-wide one.
The borders that buyers tend to over-weight:
When a property catches your interest, the right questions aren't "which county?" — they're:
Get those right, and the county line is a research routing detail — not a pricing decision.
Greater Boston is a four-county market. Treating it as one homogeneous region misses real pricing differences; treating each county as a hard pricing boundary creates phantom differences that don't exist. The team's job is to know where the line actually moves the number, where it doesn't, and how to research correctly on each side.
Working with a buyer or seller in the Essex–Middlesex–Norfolk–Suffolk corridor and want a specific submarket read? Contact the Mike Hughes Team — we work the four counties as one connected market, and we'll tell you when the county line matters and when it doesn't.