Central New York
Aurora, New York
Aurora is a village in Cayuga County, in New York's Central New York region, home to about 607 people as of the 2020 census.
Like the rest of upstate New York, an assessed value here usually isn't the market value; the state's equalization rate reconciles the two. The local rate is below, and the STAR program can lower the school-tax part of the bill.
- Type
- Village
- County
- Cayuga
- Region
- Central New York
- Population (2020)
- 607
Local Almanac
Notes in and around Aurora
Short, sourced notes tied to this place, its county, or nearby communities.
Nearby · History & Culture
Ovid's Three Bears Hold South Seneca Together
Ovid's Three Bears courthouse complex gives south Seneca County a village-park landmark with Greek Revival architecture and civic memory.
Read this note ->Nearby · History & Culture
Scipio's Howland Stone Store gives Sherwood a reform story
Scipio's Sherwood area has a strong memory handle in the 1837 Howland Stone Store, abolition, women's suffrage, and an old upstate crossroads.
Read this note ->Nearby · History & Culture
Springport's Name Still Points to Springs and Lakeports
Springport's Cayuga Lake edge, mineral springs, gypsum, and Union Springs connection give the town a name that still feels literal.
Read this note ->Nearby · Home & Property
Ovid Building Questions Run Through Town and County
Ovid residents should check the town clerk early, then Seneca County code enforcement for building permits, zoning paperwork, and stop-work rules.
Read this note ->Nearby · The Outdoors
Sampson Gives Romulus a Military-Campus Turned Lake Park Identity
Sampson State Park gives Romulus a Seneca Lake story through a former military site, marina, camping, and public shoreline recreation.
Read this note ->Nearby · History & Culture
Ledyard has Cayuga Lake on one side and old tract lines underneath
Ledyard's local texture comes from Cayuga Lake, Military Tract roots, Aurora, old roads, and small industries along a rural shore.
Read this note ->Nearby · History & Culture
Varick is the town between two lakes and a white-deer story
Varick's local feel comes from Cayuga Lake, Seneca Lake, rolling farmland, and the old Seneca Army Depot white-deer story.
Read this note ->Nearby · History & Culture
Sampson State Park Still Carries the Military-Airfield Layer of Seneca Lake
Sampson State Park gives the east side of Seneca Lake a public park identity with a former military base layer.
Read this note ->Nearby · The Outdoors
Seneca Lake Gives Geneva, Ovid, and Starkey One Shared Water Map
Seneca Lake gives Geneva, Ovid, Starkey, and nearby Finger Lakes towns a shared waterbody reference for fishing, travel, and lake planning.
Read this note ->Property tax snapshot
About $15–$30 per $1,000 in Cayuga County
Combined full-value rate — county + town/city + school district, per $1,000 of market value (FY2025). On a $300,000 home that's about $4,521–$9,135 a year before the STAR break. A village is assessed within its town; expect the town's rate plus a separate village tax.
A planning estimate, not a bill. Your exact rate depends on your school district and any village. Confirm with the assessor.
Statewide links
Statewide starting points.
Good to know
- • Your assessed value usually isn't your market value — ask for the equalization rate.
- • Register for STAR; new applicants generally receive a credit instead of an automatic exemption on the bill.
- • Outside the cities, check the well, the septic, and the FEMA flood map before you buy.
Nearby
Nearby places
Tax rates: NYS Dept of Taxation & Finance (ORPTS), Real Property Tax Rates and Levy Data by Municipality, data.ny.gov dataset iq85-sdzs. (FY2025). Population: U.S. Census 2020. Reviewed June 2026. Source data ->
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