Property details·Roslyn Heights, Nassau County, New York·07-323-00-0045
53 Circle Drive
Roslyn Heights, NY 11577
Nassau County
07-323-00-0045
40.784084, -73.641831
| Category | Amount | Year |
|---|---|---|
| Tax value | $15,153.05 | 2026 |
| Market value | $814,000 | 2025 |
| Assessed value | $814 | 2026 |
Values reflect public tax roll data as of the year shown.
County context
There's a paradox at the heart of Nassau County. This dense, car-dependent stretch of Long Island sits just east of Queens — close enough that some residents commute to Midtown Manhattan faster than people living in Brooklyn's outer neighborhoods — yet it has built one of the most affluent, owner-dominated housing markets in the entire country. With a median household income of $143,408, nearly double the national median, Nassau isn't a suburb reaching for New York City's economic energy. In many ways, it generates its own.
That income figure deserves some scrutiny. Nassau has long been defined by a particular post-war American dream: the mid-century single-family home, the LIRR commute, the excellent school district. The median year built of 1952 tells that story precisely. These are Levittown houses and their successors — modest in square footage, averaging under 2,000 square feet, but positioned on land that the New York metropolitan market has spent seven decades repricing upward.
The numbers reveal a county that is simultaneously expensive and stagnant. The median home price of $725,000 sits comfortably above the average home value of $658,700 when you account for the full stock — suggesting recent sales are skewing toward the premium end. Yet year-over-year prices are down 0.7%, a small but meaningful reversal in a market where owners have historically expected appreciation as a birthright. Rising mortgage rates since 2022 have collided hard with Nassau's already stretched affordability: a price-to-income ratio pushing 5x locally, and average transaction prices approaching $967,000, means the move-up buyer is increasingly frozen in place. The result is a market with low inventory, modest transaction volume, and prices that have finally hit a ceiling.
The extreme spread between the 10th percentile price ($397,500) and the 90th ($1,798,600) reflects Nassau's internal geography — the difference between a starter cape in Elmont and a waterfront estate in Sands Point is not just aesthetic, it's a four-fold price gap that speaks to one of Long Island's most persistent realities: hyper-local variation.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $725,000 | 2.3x national median |
| Homeownership Rate | 81.9% | among highest for dense counties nationally |
| Rent Burden Rate | 50.9% | far exceeds 30% threshold; renters are squeezed |
| YoY Price Change | -0.7% | first meaningful pullback after years of gains |
Nassau's story is usually told through its homeowners, but the 18% of households who rent face a genuinely difficult situation. A median rent of $2,195 per month is steep, and the data confirms what that number implies: fully 50.9% of renters are cost-burdened, with 27.1% severely so — meaning more than a quarter of Nassau renters spend over half their income on housing. This is a quiet affordability crisis hiding inside a wealthy county. Unlike New York City, Nassau has no significant rent stabilization framework, and the single-family character of its housing stock (76.3% of units) leaves little room for the kind of multifamily development that could ease pressure.
At a median age of 41.8, Nassau skews older than the national average, and nearly one in five residents is 65 or older — a demographic reality that shapes everything from school enrollment to healthcare demand to political priorities around property taxes. Nearly half of adults hold bachelor's or graduate degrees, yet the labor force participation rate of 65.2% is modest, likely reflecting both that aging population and a cohort of early retirees who cashed out of the New York economy at its peak.
The 13.8% work-from-home rate has quietly reshaped Nassau's daily rhythm since 2020, reducing LIRR dependency and giving some residents a reason to stay local — which may partly explain why the county's vacancy rate remains a tight 4.6%.
What makes Nassau County unique in the New York real estate market? Nassau is exceptional for combining near-urban density with an overwhelming homeownership rate of nearly 82% — almost unheard of at this population density. Most comparable counties near major metros skew heavily toward renters. Nassau's post-war building boom locked in a single-family ownership culture that has persisted for generations, producing a market where selling is rare and supply stays perpetually constrained.
Is Nassau County affordable for renters? Increasingly, no. Despite the county's high incomes, renters — who represent less than a fifth of households — face a market with few options and high costs. Over half of Nassau renters are technically cost-burdened, and the lack of large-scale multifamily housing means the supply side of the equation is unlikely to improve without significant zoning reform, a politically contentious topic in a county that has historically protected its single-family character.
Are Nassau County home prices dropping? Prices have dipped slightly — about 0.7% year-over-year — after a prolonged run-up during the pandemic era. But this is less a crash than a pause. Low inventory, strong local incomes, and continued demand from New York City spillover buyers continue to put a floor under values, particularly in the county's most desirable school districts.
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