Shingled cottages behind the hedges · Houses out by the dunes · Farmhouses near the fields · Village homes by the green and the harbor(555) 271-0490 · hello@example.com
East End Coastal Real Estate

Find your place
on a quiet lane behind the hedges.

A cedar-shingled cottage on a lane behind the privet hedges, a house out on the ocean road a walk from the dunes, a farmhouse near the fields and the farm stand, or a village home around the corner from the green and the harbor, shown to you by people who grew up on these back roads, know which lanes stay calm once the summer crowd heads home and which corners catch the morning fog off the water, and can tell you how the East End really lives in October and February, the same as it does in July.

Shingled Cottage Behind the HedgesOut by the Ocean RoadNear the Village GreenFarmhouse on the FieldsWalk to the Harbor
9
Villages and hamlets we know lane by lane, field by field, and harbor by harbor across the East End
Both
The ocean-road houses near the dunes and the calmer year-round homes on the village lanes and the farm roads back from the water
Local
We were raised out here, through the bright crowded summers and the long quiet off-season, same as the families we help settle in
540+
Families we have helped find a lane behind the hedges, a field-side farmhouse, or a village home they now call their own
On the market

Homes built for hedge-lined lanes, salt air off the dunes, and a life close to the fields and the water.

A few of the places the East End is known for, with fresh listings every week.

Shingled Cottage
Hedgerow Lane

The Cottage Behind the Privet

$1,150,000
4 Bed3 BathHedged Yard
Farmhouse
Field Road

The Farmhouse by the Fields

$895,000
4 Bed2 BathOpen Acreage
Near the Harbor
Bridge Street

The Village House by the Green

$985,000
3 Bed2 BathWalk to the Wharf
Why people put down roots out here

More than a house. A life lived behind the hedges, along the lanes, and a short ride from the fields and the sea.

01

Each season has its own feel

A bright busy summer of farm stands, beach umbrellas, and lanes full of company, a golden fall when the crowds thin, the fields turn, and the ocean goes the color of slate, a quiet bracing winter of empty roads and wind off the water, and a green spring when the hedges fill back in and the villages wake up. We help you find the place that fits the life you actually want, an ocean-road house or a calm village home back from the water.

02

You learn the lanes side by side

Which roads catch the summer traffic and which stay quiet, how a lot sits to the morning or the afternoon light, where the good school lines fall, how close a field-side farmhouse really is to the beach and the village, and which corners go peaceful the week the season ends. We walk you through the real feel of each lane and hamlet before you ever choose.

03

Straight about salt, age, and upkeep

What an old shingled house near the dunes really asks of you, how salt air treats cedar, trim, and roofs, what flood maps and elevation mean for an ocean-road home and what they do to insurance, and which repairs you can pace out over a few seasons. We give you the honest East End math up front, not after you have the keys.

The neighborhoods

Where you'll want to put down roots.

Each corner of the East End has its own feel. Here are the ones people fall for.

The Ocean Road

Cedar-shingled houses out near the dunes behind tall privet hedges, the surf at the end of the lane, and the kind of evening light people drive a long way to find

The Village

Year-round homes a walk from the green, the harbor, and the shops, sidewalks that fill up in summer and go calm in winter, and the wharf at the bottom of the street

The Farm Lanes

Farmhouses and quiet acreage back among the fields and the farm stands, room for a garden and a barn, and an easy ride to the beach, the village, and the school
New to the East End

Buying out here is its own kind of move.

A lot of our buyers are trading a crowded block and a long commute for a yard behind a tall hedge where the kids can hear the surf at night, a shingled house on the ocean road, or a calm farmhouse near the fields a short ride from the sand, so we slow down and walk you through how an East End property really lives across a full year, a packed July weekend and a still gray January morning alike.

How a shingled ocean-road house and a simpler village home hold up by the water, what salt air and a dune-block address ask of you over time, how flood maps, elevation, and insurance shape what a beach-side lot really costs, and how the town feels once the farm stands close and the summer crowd goes home. Real answers before you commit, not after your first winter out here.

Start With a Local Guide
Come walk a lane with us

The next chapter starts behind the hedges.

Tell us what you picture, a cottage on a quiet lane, a house out near the dunes, or a farmhouse by the fields, and we will send you the places worth a look.

Plan a Visit
Library · Summer People Realty (East End Coastal)