Capital Region
Hoosick, New York
Hoosick is a town in Rensselaer County, in New York's Capital Region region, home to about 6,700 people as of the 2020 census.
Whether you're moving in or you've been here for years, the checks that matter most are the school district, the assessment and STAR, and — outside the cities — the well, the septic, and the flood map.
- Type
- Town
- County
- Rensselaer
- Region
- Capital Region
- Population (2020)
- 6,711
Local Almanac
Notes in and around Hoosick
Short, sourced notes tied to this place, its county, or nearby communities.
This place · History & Culture
Hoosick's Farm-Implement Past Lives in the Louis Miller Museum
Hoosick's historical society preserves Walter Wood Company material, pointing to the town's nineteenth-century farm-implement industry beyond the battlefield story.
Read this note ->This place · History & Culture
Hoosick Holds the Bennington Battle on New York Ground
Hoosick's Revolutionary War story comes from Walloomsac, where the Bennington Battlefield story actually sits in New York.
Read this note ->Nearby · History & Culture
Cambridge Keeps an Opera House in Farm Country
Cambridge mixes Washington County farmland, historic storefronts, a Victorian train hotel, and Hubbard Hall's 1878 opera-house arts campus.
Read this note ->Nearby · History & Culture
Schaghticoke Connects Dutch Houses to Hoosic Water Power
Schaghticoke's local memory runs through Dutch farmhouses, Native place names, the Hoosic River, and mill-era village growth.
Read this note ->Nearby · History & Culture
White Creek keeps Quaker, farm, and Taconic-edge history visible
White Creek's town site ties Cambridge Patent history, Quaker settlement, farms, creeks, and Taconic foothills into one local picture.
Read this note ->Nearby · History & Culture
Hoosick Falls: where Grandma Moses got her start
The folk painter Grandma Moses lived, painted, and is buried here, and the village sits in Revolutionary War country near Bennington Battlefield.
Read this note ->Nearby · The Outdoors
Grafton Lakes Turns the Plateau Into a Four-Season Park Town
Grafton Lakes brings six ponds, Long Pond beach, trout water, trail miles, and winter use to a forested Rensselaer plateau.
Read this note ->Nearby · History & Culture
Pittstown Keeps Its Old Patent Story in the Hills
Pittstown carries a 1761 patent story, William Pitt name, hill-country landscape, and Tomhannock Reservoir edge.
Read this note ->Nearby · Home & Property
Upper-Hudson Waterfront Lots Need A Flood-Map Check
River and creek properties in the upper Hudson corridor deserve a calm FEMA flood-map check before buying, building, or planning major repairs.
Read this note ->Property tax snapshot
Roughly $21–$22 per $1,000
Combined full-value rate — county + town/city + school district, per $1,000 of market value (FY2025). On a $300,000 home that's about $6,269–$6,686 a year before the STAR break.
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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