I have been having trouble finding a home I like and I am ready to own. I finally found one that is in the right area and I really like the layout and look of but it is on a busy road. My parents keep telling me that I might not like that once I have kids and it might be hard to resell. Is that a deal breaker for a lot of buyers?
Asked by Trenton K | Dodge City, KS| 03-23-2026| 75 views|Buying|Updated 1 month ago
Your parents are raising a real concern, and it deserves a straight answer. Yes, a busy road does create friction for a lot of buyers, especially families with young kids. But whether it's a deal breaker for you depends on specific factors you can measure right now, before you commit.
Here's what the market tells me after 30+ years and 500+ closings: a property on a busy road typically sells slower and for less than an equivalent home on a quiet street. The discount varies by location and severity. In parts of Bergen County, I've seen anywhere from 5 to 15 percent haircut, sometimes more. That matters when you eventually resell. Noise, traffic vibration, air quality concerns, safety worries about kids playing outside—these become real once you have a family living there, even if they feel abstract now.
But this isn't automatically a no. It's a financial question that needs numbers attached to it.
Start here: What's the price you're paying for this home? Then find three comparable homes (same size, condition, general area) on quieter streets that sold in the last 60 days. Compare the price per square foot. That gap is your future resale penalty. Run the math: if you're buying at $500,000 on a busy road but that same home on a quiet street would cost $550,000, you're building in a $50,000 headwind when you sell in five or ten years, even if the market stays flat.
Next layer: How busy is the road, really? Is it a secondary route with moderate traffic, or is it a state highway or major commuter corridor? Proximity matters too. A house set back 200 feet with mature trees is different from one sitting 30 feet from the curb. You can visit at different times of day to test noise and vibration yourself.
Finally, ask yourself two things: How long do you realistically plan to stay? If you're looking at five years or less, the resale hit stings more. And when kids arrive, will that road concern you enough to move? Because if the answer is yes, you're potentially buying a home you'll outgrow.
What does the price difference look like between this home and comparable ones in quieter locations in your target area?
This is really personal choice. The benefits are that homes on main roads tend to be cheaper and have easy access, but the cons are lower resale and possibly alienating certain types of buyers, for example, ones with kids. Best of luck!
Buying on a busy road is a trade-off that comes down to how much the price discount is worth relative to the lifestyle impact and the resale reality.
In Hernando County and throughout Florida, homes on or near high-traffic corridors consistently sell at a discount compared to comparable homes on interior streets, typically 5 to 15 percent depending on traffic volume and visibility. That discount is real and can represent significant value if you are comfortable with the noise and traffic. The issue is that the same discount works against you when you sell, because buyers will apply the same logic and negotiate accordingly. You are not buying a disadvantage you can overcome with upgrades. Road noise and traffic are permanent features of the location.
Before you commit, visit the property at multiple times of day including morning and evening peak hours, weekends, and after 9 PM. Sit in the backyard or on the porch for 30 minutes. Open the windows. That experience is more accurate than a drive-by. Also evaluate the specific road: a state highway is different from a county collector road, and a road with a median and noise barrier reads differently than an exposed frontage. If the price reflects the location and you can live with the reality of it, the deal may make sense. If you are planning to flip or sell within 5 years, be realistic about what that discount will look like on the other side of the transaction.
Experiencing the property at peak traffic times before you offer tells you more than any data point.
Kevin Neely & Kaitlynd Robbins | K2 Sells, Keller Williams Elite Partners
It’s not a deal breaker, but it does come with tradeoffs.
A busy road usually means more noise and less privacy. Some buyers won’t even consider it, especially families with kids. That’s where your parents are coming from.
It also affects resale. You can still sell it, but you’ll likely have a smaller buyer pool and sometimes a lower price compared to similar homes on quieter streets.
The flip side is you’re often getting a better deal upfront for the same house.
Best way to decide is simple. Go there at different times of day. Morning, evening, weekend. Sit outside, listen, watch the traffic.
If it doesn’t bother you and the price reflects it, it can work. Just go in knowing you’ll face the same conversation when you sell.
It’s not an automatic deal breaker, but your parents aren’t wrong either—being on a busy road usually means noise, safety concerns (especially with kids/pets), and weaker resale appeal. The biggest thing to understand is that you’ll likely get a discount when you buy, but you’ll also sell at a discount later, and your buyer pool will be smaller. That said, some people are totally fine with it if the house checks enough boxes—especially if there’s good fencing, a setback from the road, or limited through-traffic at night. My advice: visit the home at different times of day (rush hour vs evening), stand outside and inside to gauge noise, and think honestly about your lifestyle in 3–5 years. If everything else is perfect, it can still be a solid buy—but only if you go in knowing resale will be a little tougher and price it accordingly on the front end.
If you love the home and it does not bother you than I would consider it. I agree it could be an issue with children or pets in the future if there is no way to fence in the backyard to keep them from getting near the busy street.
The biggest advantage is usually price. Homes on busy roads often sell for less than similar homes in quieter spots, which can mean:
Lower purchase price
Potentially better value per square foot
Opportunity to get into a neighborhood you otherwise couldn’t afford
Smart things to check before buying
Visit at different times of day (morning, rush hour, night)
Sit in the house with windows closed and open
Check how easy it is to enter/exit the driveway
Look at comparable sales on similar busy roads
See if there are future road expansion plans
They can also be more visible, which can help in a sale later on.
This is one of those situations where your head and your gut are kind of fighting each other, and that’s completely normal.
You’re not wrong for loving the house. If it checks the boxes on layout, location, and overall feel, that’s a big deal…because finding that combination isn’t easy. But your parents aren’t wrong either. Being on a busy road is one of those things that will always affect resale to some degree.
It’s not a deal breaker for all buyers, but it does shrink your buyer pool. Some people won’t care at all, especially if the house itself is strong enough. Others will immediately pass because of kids, pets, noise, or just personal preference. So when it comes time to sell, you’re typically looking at needing to be priced a little more competitively to attract the right buyer. The bigger question for you is how it affects your day-to-day life. Things like pulling in and out of the driveway, noise inside the home, and how the yard feels are what usually make or break it long term. Those are the things people don’t fully think through until they’re living there.
This is also where having someone in your corner matters, because it’s not just about whether you can buy the house, it’s about whether it’s a smart buy for you. Sometimes the right move is going for it and negotiating accordingly, and sometimes it’s walking away even when you like it. If you want, I’m happy to help you think through it from both angles so you’re not just buying a house you love today, but one you won’t regret later.