Niagara County, NY
Property Data

Explore accurate parcel and ownership records,
directly sourced from county assessors.

Total Properties

98,646

Average Home Price

$253,646

Average Square Feet

1,880

Price per Sq Ft

$164

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
620,780

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

98,646

Median Home Price

$222,000

Average Home Price

$253,646

Average Square Feet

1,880

Price per Sq Ft

$164

Recent Sales (12mo)

1,152

YoY Price Change

8.1%

Sales Velocity

79.7%

Niagara County, New York: Affordable Homes, Invisible Pressures

Niagara County sits at one of North America's most dramatic natural borders — where the Great Lakes drain into the Niagara River and the world's most famous waterfall draws millions of tourists annually. Yet the county's real estate story has almost nothing to do with tourism dollars trickling down to residents. Instead, it's a study in quiet affordability, industrial legacy, and a demographic aging curve that will define the next decade of its housing market.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Value$177,40045% below national median of $320,000
Homeownership Rate70.9%well above national average of ~65%
Price-to-Income Ratio2.6xremarkably affordable vs. 4x national benchmark
Rent Burden Rate44.9%well above the 30% threshold — a hidden crisis

The Affordability Paradox

At first glance, Niagara County looks like a homebuyer's dream. A median home price of $213,000 against a median household income just shy of $68,000 produces a price-to-income ratio of roughly 2.6x — less than two-thirds the national benchmark and a figure that would seem laughable to anyone shopping in metro Buffalo's tighter corridors, let alone New York City or Boston. The county's 70.9% homeownership rate reflects this accessibility: when homes are genuinely within reach, people buy them.

But read the renter data and the picture shifts. Nearly 45% of Niagara County renters are spending more than 30% of income on housing — well above the standard burden threshold — and almost one in four faces severe rent burden above 50%. With a median rent of just $870, this isn't a high-cost rental market. It's a low-income one. The burden falls on households whose earnings simply can't absorb even modest rents, a pattern consistent with the county's 13% poverty rate and a child poverty rate that climbs even higher at 18%.

An Older, Slower Market

The median housing stock was built in 1952 — the postwar manufacturing era when Niagara County anchored chemical and electrochemical industries that once made Lockport and Niagara Falls industrial powerhouses. That legacy left a dense grid of older single-family homes (67.8% of the housing stock) that are affordable but increasingly costly to maintain. The median age of residents is 43.2, and more than 20% of the population is 65 or older, suggesting the county is approaching a generational transfer of property at scale. That wave of inventory could either suppress prices further or attract younger buyers priced out of tighter Western New York markets.

With only 741 sales recorded in the past 12 months and year-over-year appreciation at 2.9%, this is not a speculative market. It's a stable, slow-moving one.

FAQs

What makes Niagara County unique in New York's housing market? Despite being adjacent to one of the world's great tourist destinations, Niagara County has one of the most accessible housing markets in New York State — with prices well below the national median and homeownership rates that rival suburban Midwest benchmarks. The disconnect between its scenic fame and its economic modesty is the defining tension of the county.

Is Niagara County actually affordable for renters? On paper, rents are low. In practice, renter households here face some of the worst cost-burden rates in the region — nearly half pay more than they should relative to income. Low rents and high burden coexist because wages and transfer incomes for the renter population are simply too thin to absorb even modest housing costs.

Could Niagara County benefit from Buffalo's growth spillover? Potentially. As Buffalo tightens and younger professionals look for affordable alternatives within commuting distance, Niagara County's stock of inexpensive single-family homes becomes genuinely attractive. The 2.9% annual price gain is modest but consistent — a sign the market is quietly firming without overheating.

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