Money & Taxes · Hudson Valley
Greenburgh assessment questions belong with the Assessor early
Greenburgh’s assessor page is the local route for assessment, exemption, and property-record questions before a tax appeal becomes a guess.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
A Greenburgh tax bill usually raises two different questions: how to pay it, and whether the assessment or exemption record is right. The town Assessor’s Office page is the place to start for the second question. Homeowners should use it to confirm assessment information, exemption routes, and the office responsible for the roll before hiring help or assuming a bill is wrong.
New owners should also check whether exemptions transfer, expire, or need a new application. The plain move is not a theory about taxes; it is finding the local office that owns the record.
This is the kind of errand where the right office matters. Greenburgh has many hamlets, school districts, and address patterns, so a property owner should keep the parcel, street address, bill year, and exemption question together before calling.
Deadlines, forms, and exemption rules can change, so check the town page close to the time you act. If the problem is payment timing, the answer may not sit with the assessor. If the problem is value, exemption, or property record detail, the assessor is the cleaner starting point. Keep a small paper trail of names, dates, and documents requested. In Greenburgh, Westchester County, a call to the Greenburgh Assessor’s Office usually goes better with that little folder open.