If you're looking at houses near the Nassau/Queens line, you'll notice Queens tax bills look much lower. That's real — NYC Class 1 (1-3 family) homes pay an effective rate around 0.69% vs. Nassau's ~2.08%. But NYC uses caps and an assessment ratio of just 6% of market value, so comparing the systems requires unpacking how each one actually computes the bill.
Bottom line: A $700k single-family home pays roughly $14,500/yr in Nassau but only $4,800/yr in Queens (Class 1) at current rates. That's nearly $10k/yr difference. The reason: NYC's Class 1 properties are protected by per-year cap on assessment growth (6% per year, 20% over 5 years), which has kept assessed values far below market.
| Nassau County | Queens (NYC Class 1) | |
|---|---|---|
| Median property tax bill (single-family) | $11,108 | ~$5,500/yr |
| Median single-family home value | ~$505,000 | ~$770,000 |
| Effective property tax rate | ~2.08% | ~0.69% |
| Assessment ratio | ~0.10% (Nassau LoA) | 6% of market (Class 1) |
| Class 1 tax rate (2025) | N/A | 20.085% of AV |
| Cap on annual assessed value growth | No cap | 6% per year / 20% over 5 years |
| STAR available | Yes | Yes (NYC STAR + Enhanced) |
| Sales tax | 8.625% | 8.875% |
NYC Class 1 (1-3 family residential) is one of the most tax-protected property classes in the country. Three legal protections compound:
The result: Queens homeowners who bought before 2010 often have AVs that are 30-50% of what they'd be under a full reassessment. New buyers "inherit" that protected AV when they purchase. Nassau has none of these caps — your AV updates to current market every year.
The tax savings are real but come with real trade-offs:
The honest math: Queens saves you ~$8-10k/yr on property tax but costs you ~$5-7k/yr in NYC income tax. Net of ~$2-4k/yr, plus the home-size and school-quality trade-offs.
Different state-level statutes. NYC's caps are written into Real Property Tax Law specific to NYC (Class 1-4 system). Nassau is under standard NY State assessment rules. The 2% property tax LEVY cap (NY §2022) does limit how much a Nassau district can collect year-over-year, but it doesn't cap individual assessments — those can rise to track current market value.
NYC condos and co-ops are Class 2, not Class 1, and have a different tax rate (~13.6% in 2025). They don't get the Class 1 caps. Effective rates on condos are typically 1.0-1.5% — still lower than Nassau condo equivalents, but the gap is smaller than for single-family.
Not all at once. Class 1 caps "carry forward" with the property to the new owner, then the AV continues to grow within the 6%/20% cap from there. So a long-protected home doesn't suddenly jump to market AV on sale — it stays low and grows slowly. This is part of why Queens single-family inventory commands a premium: buyers are buying the protected AV.
The Nassau-Queens border runs through neighborhoods where you can literally see the difference — identical houses across the street pay vastly different taxes. If you're shopping in this corridor, check the Queens side as well as the Nassau side; the same dollar of mortgage gets you less tax on the Queens side, often by $6-10k/yr.
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Estimates and educational content only — not legal, tax, or financial advice. Verify with your county or town receiver, an attorney, or a CPA before making financial decisions.