Orange County, NY
Property Data

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

Total Properties

170,189

Average Home Price

$425,586

Average Square Feet

1,999

Price per Sq Ft

$239

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
627,052

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

170,189

Median Home Price

$375,000

Average Home Price

$425,586

Average Square Feet

1,999

Price per Sq Ft

$239

Recent Sales (12mo)

3,469

YoY Price Change

5.6%

Sales Velocity

52.1%

Orange County, NY: The Hudson Valley's Pressure Valve — and Its Limits

Orange County occupies a peculiar and telling position in the New York metropolitan ecosystem. Close enough to Manhattan for a reasonable commute via Metro-North or the bus corridors along I-87, yet far enough to feel genuinely rural in its northern stretches near the Catskill foothills, it has long served as the pressure valve for families priced out of Westchester, Rockland, and the outer boroughs. The data reflects that tension in almost every direction.

The median household income of $96,497 — well above the national figure of $75,149 — tells you this is not a struggling exurb. Many residents carry New York City wages into a county where a median home still clocks in around $385,000, compared to what those same dollars would buy closer to the city. That math has driven Orange County's appeal for a decade, and pandemic-era remote work supercharged it. The county absorbed significant migration from downstate New York between 2020 and 2023, which partly explains why prices remain elevated even as the year-over-year gain has cooled sharply to just 1.3% — the initial wave of demand-driven appreciation has run its course.

The Affordability Paradox

Despite incomes that comfortably exceed national norms, Orange County carries a rent burden statistic that should stop anyone mid-sentence: 52.8% of renters are cost-burdened, with nearly 30% in severe burden — meaning they're spending more than half their income on housing. That's a striking divergence from the homeownership story, where 68.4% of households own their homes and likely locked in pre-surge prices.

What's happening is a classic bifurcated market. The homeowning majority, many of them long-term residents or early arrivals who bought before 2020, are sitting comfortably. The renting minority — which includes many younger families, recent arrivals, and lower-wage service workers who staff the county's healthcare systems, distribution centers, and retail — faces median rents of $1,602 against incomes that, for this demographic, don't approach the county median. The child poverty rate of 18.9%, notably higher than the overall poverty rate of 13.0%, underscores where that pressure lands hardest.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$385,000~20% above national median
Rent Burden Rate52.8%Nearly double the 30% threshold
Homeownership Rate68.4%Well above national average
YoY Price Change+1.3%Significant cooldown from pandemic peak

A Young, Growing County With Structural Gaps

With a median age of just 36.9 and over 25% of the population under 18, Orange County skews younger than most of upstate New York — a reflection of family-formation migration rather than retirement-driven moves. School enrollment at 28.6% of the population signals genuine demographic vitality. Yet educational attainment lags: only 18.2% hold a bachelor's degree, and 10.3% lack a high school diploma entirely. For a county this close to a global financial capital, that gap matters for long-term wage growth.

The county's economic base is genuinely mixed — West Point and its civilian workforce, the distribution and logistics corridor along I-84 near Newburgh, Middletown's healthcare and retail sector, and a growing creative/remote-worker class settling in towns like Warwick and Chester. That diversity provides resilience, but it also means the county contains economic worlds that barely interact.


FAQs

What makes Orange County, NY unique as a real estate market? Orange County sits at the outer edge of practical New York City commuting range, making it one of the last counties in the metro area where a family can buy a single-family home under $400,000 while still maintaining access to city employment. That positioning — combined with genuine landscape appeal including the Hudson Highlands, Black Dirt farming region, and Catskill foothills — gives it a demand floor that most true upstate markets lack.

Is Orange County, NY affordable for renters? Not particularly, despite its reputation as a lower-cost alternative to downstate counties. With over half of renters cost-burdened and median rents exceeding $1,600/month, the rental market is under genuine stress. Renters who don't earn near the county median — roughly $96,000 per household — are likely to struggle, particularly as the supply of affordable rental units has not kept pace with population growth.

How has remote work changed Orange County's housing market? The 11.5% work-from-home rate reflects a structural shift that peaked during the pandemic and has partially normalized. Remote workers helped bid up prices substantially between 2020 and 2022; the current near-flat appreciation suggests the market has digested that demand. The longer-term question is whether return-to-office pressures will dampen demand from city-based remote workers who anchored much of the recent growth.

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