Thinking of Moving from NYC to Westchester in 2026? Here's What the Market Actually Looks Like

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Buyer Guide
NYC & Westchester — 2026

Thinking of Moving from NYC to Westchester in 2026? Here’s What the Market Actually Looks Like

The NYC-to-Westchester move is one of the most common transitions Tami Earnest navigates. The market reality — prices, taxes, commutes, school districts — is more nuanced than the media narrative suggests. Here’s an honest look at what buyers actually encounter.

Tami Earnest
Tami Earnest
Licensed Real Estate Salesperson  ·  Compass
Published 2026-05-11 • Updated 2026-05-11
Direct Answer

What should I know before moving from NYC to Westchester in 2026?

Key realities: Westchester's average sale price is $1.3M (up 11% YoY) and homes go to pending in approximately 29 days — buyers need to be prepared. Property taxes run $15,000-$35,000+ annually and are not included in the purchase price or mortgage. School district boundaries require street-level verification. Metro-North express commutes to Grand Central run 27-38 minutes from most major Westchester towns. NYC buyers deploying equity from city sales are the primary driver of Westchester demand at this price point.

Talk Through the NYC-to-Westchester Move With Tami →

The NYC-to-Westchester move is one of the most considered transitions buyers make — and the one where accurate information matters most. Here’s what the market actually looks like in 2026 for buyers crossing the city line.
What to Expect
The Westchester market reality for incoming NYC buyers

NYC buyers moving to Westchester in 2026 are entering a market that behaves differently from what they’re used to in important ways. Understanding those differences before you start searching changes how you approach the process.

FactorNYC ExperienceWestchester Reality
PaceFast; multiple offers in hours sometimes29 days median to pending; still moves quickly
Board approvalCo-ops require 60-90 day processNot applicable — no co-op boards on single-family
Property typeCo-ops, condos dominantSingle-family homes dominant; some condos
Property taxesIncluded in maintenance/common chargesBilled separately; $15K-$35K+ annually
Price vs. spaceHigh PPSF; smaller unitsMore sq footage per dollar; lot size matters
School districtsNYC public school systemTown-specific districts; boundaries vary by street

The most consequential adjustment for most NYC buyers is property taxes. A $1.3M Westchester home with $25,000 in annual taxes adds over $2,000 per month to carrying costs that don’t appear in the mortgage payment. The Westchester Q1 2026 market data provides the pricing context, and the NYC-to-Westchester conversations Tami has each week capture what buyers are most surprised by in practice.

The Equity Question
How NYC home proceeds fund the Westchester purchase

The most important financial dynamic in the NYC-to-Westchester move is the equity question. Many buyers have accumulated substantial equity in NYC properties over the past 5-10 years — equity that translates directly into Westchester purchasing power.

A buyer who purchased a Manhattan co-op for $700,000 in 2016 and is selling into today’s $900,000-$1,000,000 range has roughly $200,000-$300,000 in equity available (less closing costs and any remaining mortgage). At 20% down on a $1.2M Westchester purchase, that equity covers or nearly covers the down payment.

This equity arithmetic is why NYC buyers represent a meaningful segment of Westchester demand — they can absorb Westchester’s $1.3M average without the leverage stress that implies for a first-time buyer. The guide to what that average price means for Westchester sellers covers the seller side of this dynamic, and the NYC-to-Westchester migration signal analysis shows the scale of the incoming buyer pool.

Town Selection
How to choose the right Westchester town for your situation
PriorityBest Town OptionsTrade-offs
Fastest Manhattan commuteMount Vernon, Yonkers, New RochelleLess suburban character; smaller homes
Best school districtsScarsdale, Bronxville, Rye, HarrisonHighest prices; limited inventory
Best value per dollarNew Rochelle, White Plains, TarrytownLess cachet; improving but not peak schools
Most walkable / urban feelLarchmont, Mamaroneck, TarrytownSmaller inventory; premium for village proximity
Most space for budgetChappaqua, Armonk, PleasantvilleLonger commute; lower density
Closest to NYC characterHastings-on-Hudson, Dobbs Ferry, ArdsleyHudson River towns; community character

Town selection in Westchester is ultimately a priority trade-off. No single town is best across all dimensions — the right choice depends on whether commute time, school district quality, price point, or lifestyle character ranks first. NYC buyers who assume Westchester is homogeneous are regularly surprised by how differentiated the towns are within 20 miles of each other.

FAQ
Common questions answered
What do I need to know before moving from NYC to Westchester in 2026?
Key things to know: the Westchester market is supply-constrained with an average sale price of $1.3M and homes going to pending in about 29 days, so buyers need to be prepared to move quickly; school district boundaries are complex and require verification for specific streets; property taxes in Westchester are higher than most buyers expect; and the commute varies significantly by town, train line, and express vs. local schedule.
How much does it cost to buy a home in Westchester in 2026?
The average sale price for single-family homes in Westchester County was $1.3 million in Q1 2026, up 11% year-over-year. Entry points in towns like New Rochelle and Yonkers start below $700,000. Scarsdale and Bronxville typically start above $1.5 million. Most buyers making the NYC-to-Westchester move deploy equity from their NYC property, which reduces the financing burden significantly.
How long is the commute from Westchester to Manhattan?
Metro-North is the primary commute vehicle. Express trains from Scarsdale to Grand Central run approximately 32-35 minutes. Larchmont to Grand Central: approximately 37 minutes express. New Rochelle: approximately 27-30 minutes express. White Plains: approximately 33-38 minutes. Mount Vernon: approximately 25 minutes. Most Westchester towns have multiple daily express runs during peak commuting hours.
What are the property taxes like in Westchester?
Westchester has some of the highest property taxes in the United States. Annual taxes vary significantly by town but commonly run $15,000-$35,000+ for single-family homes at the $1.3M average price point. Scarsdale taxes are among the highest in the county, often exceeding $30,000 annually. Buyers should budget property taxes explicitly into monthly carrying cost calculations — they are a meaningful ongoing expense.
What surprises NYC buyers most about the Westchester market?
Three things consistently surprise NYC buyers: (1) How fast well-priced homes go — 29 days to pending is faster than many buyers expect from a suburban market; (2) property taxes, which are substantially higher than buyers from outside the area anticipate; and (3) the complexity of school district boundaries — the same street can change school districts, and verification requires checking with the specific district, not just the town name.

The NYC-to-Westchester move in 2026 requires buyers to adjust for several market realities that differ from the city: property taxes of $15,000-$35,000+ annually, homes going to pending in 29 days (requiring preparation), school district boundaries that require street-level verification, and a $1.3M average price point that is accessible primarily to buyers deploying NYC equity. The commute from most Westchester towns to Grand Central via Metro-North runs 27-38 minutes by express train. Town selection is a priority trade-off between commute time, school district quality, price, and lifestyle character.

The move from NYC to Westchester is a life decision first and a real estate transaction second. The buyers who navigate it best are the ones who are honest about their priorities before they start searching — not after.

Tami Earnest — Licensed Real Estate Salesperson | Compass
Serving Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Westchester County, NY.
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Tami EarnestTami EarnestLicensed Real Estate Salesperson  ·  Compass

Active on both sides of the NYC-Westchester move — working with NYC sellers and Westchester buyers simultaneously, which means both markets are visible in real time.

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Areas Covered
Manhattan · Brooklyn · Scarsdale · New Rochelle · Larchmont · Bronxville · Rye · Harrison · Mamaroneck


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