19 Creelman Road

Property details·Suffern, Rockland County, New York·39260154.11-2-3

Location

Address

19 Creelman Road

Suffern, NY 10901

Rockland County

Parcel ID

39260154.11-2-3

Coordinates

41.113338, -74.160899

County context

Rockland County 2026 Insights

Rockland County, New York: Suburban Wealth, Hidden Stress

Rockland County sits just north of the Tappan Zee — now the Governor Mario M. Cuomo Bridge — in that particular zone of New York's lower Hudson Valley where suburban aspiration and economic tension coexist in unusually sharp relief. Thirty miles from Midtown Manhattan, it has long attracted families priced out of Westchester and Bergen County looking for space without fully surrendering their commute. What the numbers reveal in 2024, however, is a county caught between genuine prosperity and a quiet affordability crisis hiding beneath the surface.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$528,50065% above national median
YoY Price Change+19.3%nearly 3x typical suburban appreciation
Rent Burden Rate55.8%vs. 30% healthy benchmark
Child Poverty Rate25.1%strikingly high given median income of $110k+

A 19% Price Surge Demands Explanation

A nearly 20% year-over-year price increase isn't a trend — it's a signal. Rockland has been a beneficiary of New York City's ongoing post-pandemic decentralization, drawing families from Brooklyn and Queens who can suddenly justify a 2,240-square-foot home with a yard at $264 per square foot. Compare that to what that money buys in Park Slope or Astoria, and the calculus becomes obvious. Towns like Nyack, Piermont, and New City carry genuine community character — farmers markets, indie restaurant scenes, easy river access — making the pitch compelling even for remote workers who rarely need Penn Station anymore. The 12.8% work-from-home rate here reflects that shift directly.

The Inequality Hidden Inside Prosperity

Here's what makes Rockland genuinely unusual: a median household income of $110,631 — nearly 50% above the national figure — coexisting with a child poverty rate of 25.1% and a Gini coefficient of 0.469, which places it in territory more typically associated with deeply unequal urban cores. This isn't an anomaly; it's the fingerprint of a county with significant ultra-Orthodox and Hasidic communities in municipalities like Ramapo and Spring Valley, where large household sizes, single-income structures, and religious school enrollment patterns produce income distributions that aggregate statistics flatten into something misleading. The 29.4% share of residents under 18 — well above national norms — reinforces this demographic reality.

Renters Are Getting Squeezed

With a median rent of $1,826 and a severe rent burden rate of 32.4%, nearly a third of renters are spending more than half their income on housing. That's not a suburban affordability problem — that's a crisis. The 11.2% SNAP participation rate and 2.7% public assistance rate tell the same story: beneath the comfortable median income headline, a meaningful segment of Rockland's population is housing-stressed in a market now appreciating at nearly 20% annually.

What the Ownership Numbers Actually Mean

A 68.3% homeownership rate looks healthy on paper, and for longtime owners it is — equity gains at this appreciation rate are substantial. But with prices ranging from $271,550 at the 10th percentile to nearly $987,000 at the 90th, the market has stratified dramatically. First-time buyers face a price-to-income ratio approaching 5x even at the lower end of the market.


FAQs

What makes Rockland County unique? Rockland is one of very few counties in the United States where dramatic suburban wealth statistics coexist with high child poverty rates — a product of its unusually large, tight-knit religious communities whose economic structures don't fit conventional demographic models. Add a Hudson River setting, 19th-century village architecture, and proximity to Manhattan, and you get a county that consistently defies easy categorization.

Is Rockland County a good place to buy a home right now? For buyers with equity from a New York City sale, Rockland remains competitively priced relative to Westchester to the north and Bergen County across the river. But with 19% annual appreciation already baked in and rent burdens at crisis levels, the window for affordable entry is narrowing fast — particularly for buyers without significant down payments.

Why are home prices rising so fast in Rockland County? Limited housing stock, strong post-pandemic migration from New York City, and the county's relative value compared to neighboring markets have converged to create fierce competition. With a vacancy rate of just 4.9% and only 118 recent sales recorded, supply is structurally constrained — which tends to amplify price movements in both directions.

Local market context

Suffern has 10,148 properties in our comprehensive database.

Properties in Suffern average $689,240, reflecting a competitive market.

The price per square foot of $320 reflects strong property valuations in this area.

Home prices in Suffern are 14% higher than the Rockland County average.

MetricSuffernRockland Countyvs County
Average Price$689,240$602,451+14%
Avg Sq Ft2,1562,200-2%
Price/Sq Ft$320$274+17%
Properties10,148109,388-91%

Nearby properties

Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.

Frequently Asked Questions About Suffern, NY Real Estate

What is the average home price in Suffern, NY?

The average home price in Suffern, NY is $689,240, based on analysis of 10,148 properties in our database.

How many properties are tracked in Suffern, NY?

Our database includes 10,148 properties in Suffern, NY, providing comprehensive market coverage.

What is the price per square foot in Suffern, NY?

The average price per square foot in Suffern, NY is $320. This is calculated from an average home price of $689,240 and average size of 2,156 square feet.

What is the average home size in Suffern, NY?

Homes in Suffern, NY average 2,156 square feet, with an average price of $689,240.

How does Suffern, NY compare to other cities in Rockland County?

Suffern, NY is one of many cities in Rockland County, NY with property data available. Browse other cities in the county to compare market conditions and pricing.

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