Why New Rochelle Property Taxes Hit Landlords Harder Than Most
If you own a rental in New Rochelle, your property tax bill is probably your single biggest expense after the mortgage. Westchester County consistently ranks among the highest-taxed counties in the entire United States, and New Rochelle landlords feel that pressure every quarter.
A standard 2-family home in the North End can easily generate a tax bill of $15,000–$22,000 per year. Multi-family buildings on North Avenue or near Lincoln Park push well past $30,000. And unlike NYC's five boroughs, New Rochelle landlords don't get the same protective tax classes — your rental is taxed much like a commercial asset.
Let's break down what you're actually paying for, where landlords lose money, and how to fight back.
The Three Tax Bills You're Actually Paying
Many new investors don't realize they receive three separate property tax bills in New Rochelle:
- City of New Rochelle tax (covers police, fire, sanitation, DPW)
- Westchester County tax (county services, social programs, parks)
- New Rochelle City School District tax — by far the largest, often 60–65% of your total bill
The school tax bill is mailed in late August and is due in two installments (September and January). The combined city/county bill arrives in April. Miss either deadline and you're hit with 5% interest the first month, plus 1% each additional month — and Westchester does not forgive late fees no matter how good your excuse.
Pain Point: The Quarterly Cash Flow Trap
Unlike NYC where property taxes are billed quarterly in smaller chunks, New Rochelle's two-installment school tax means you might owe $7,000+ in a single September payment. Landlords who don't reserve monthly for this get crushed every fall.
How Your Assessment Actually Works
New Rochelle uses an assessment ratio (also called the equalization rate) rather than full market value. Your assessed value is multiplied by the tax rate to produce your bill.
Here's where landlords get burned: the city reassessed properties in 2022, and many 1–4 family rentals saw their assessments jump 40–70%. If you bought your property before 2022 at one valuation and didn't grieve the new assessment, you're likely overpaying right now.
The 2026 tax rate per $1,000 of assessed value is hovering around:
- City portion: ~$8.50
- County portion: ~$3.10
- School portion: ~$19.40
Do the math on a $600,000 assessed 2-family: that's roughly $18,600 per year before any exemptions.
Grievance Day: The One Date That Saves Landlords Thousands
Mark this on your calendar in permanent ink: Grievance Day is the third Tuesday in June. That's your single annual window to challenge your assessment with the New Rochelle Board of Assessment Review.
To file successfully you'll need:
- A completed Form RP-524 (the New York State grievance form)
- Comparable sales data from the past 12 months
- Recent appraisal or income/expense statements for income-producing property
- Photos showing any condition issues (water damage, deferred maintenance, etc.)
Landlords with rental properties have an advantage here — you can use the income approach to argue your property is worth less based on actual NOI. If your building generates $48,000 in net operating income and the prevailing cap rate in New Rochelle is 6.5%, you can argue a market value of ~$738,000 regardless of what the city assessed.
Miss Grievance Day and you wait an entire year. We've seen landlords save $3,000–$8,000 annually just by filing properly.
Exemptions Most Landlords Don't Claim
While owner-occupied properties get the bulk of New York's exemptions (STAR, Enhanced STAR, senior, veterans), landlords still have options:
- 2-family owner-occupied? You still qualify for STAR on your unit. Most landlords forget this.
- Capital improvement exemption — major renovations can be partially exempted from increased assessment for up to 8 years
- Business Investment Exemption for mixed-use properties on commercial corridors like Main Street or North Avenue
- Section 485-a for converting non-residential to mixed-use — a 12-year phased exemption
The deadline to file most exemptions is March 1st (Taxable Status Date). Miss it and you wait a full year.
How to Challenge Your Bill (Even After Grievance Day)
If the Board denies your grievance, you have two escalation paths:
Small Claims Assessment Review (SCAR)
For 1–3 family residential properties, file a SCAR petition within 30 days of receiving the Board's denial. The filing fee is just $30, you don't need a lawyer, and you'll get a hearing before a court-appointed hearing officer. SCAR has a roughly 60% success rate for prepared petitioners.
Article 7 Petition
For 4+ unit buildings or commercial property, you'll file an Article 7 tax certiorari proceeding in Westchester County Supreme Court. This requires an attorney but the savings can be substantial — often $10,000+ per year for multi-unit landlords.
The Escrow Mistake Costing Landlords Thousands
One overlooked issue: if your mortgage escrows taxes, your lender pays the bill — but they don't grieve it, claim exemptions, or warn you when assessments jump. Every year, review your escrow statement and the city's assessment roll (published May 1st on the New Rochelle Assessor's website).
We've audited new clients who were overpaying by $4,000–$6,000 a year simply because nobody on their team was watching the assessment.
Quick Action Checklist for 2026
- March 1: File any exemption applications
- May 1: Review the tentative assessment roll online
- Third Tuesday in June: File grievance if assessment is too high
- Late August: School tax bill arrives — confirm receipt
- April: City/County tax bill arrives — confirm receipt
- Year-round: Track comparable sales and your building's NOI for next year's grievance
Property taxes in New Rochelle aren't going down. But landlords who actively manage their assessments — instead of paying whatever shows up in the mail — keep thousands more in their pockets every year.