Finger Lakes
Rush, New York
Rush is a town in Monroe County, in New York's Finger Lakes region, home to about 3,500 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
- Town
- County
- Monroe
- Region
- Finger Lakes
- Population (2020)
- 3,490
Local Almanac
Notes in and around Rush
Short, sourced notes tied to this place, its county, or nearby communities.
This place · History & Culture
Rush keeps Monroe County's creek-and-farm edge visible
Rush sits on Monroe County's southern edge, where creek country, farms, and town-scale government feel different from Rochester shorthand.
Read this note ->Nearby · History & Culture
Avon's Spa Days Still Sit Beside the Genesee River Trail Story
Avon's village history links Genesee River settlement, mineral springs, broad-gauge rail service, and the short-line railroad still visible today.
Read this note ->Nearby · The Outdoors
Mendon Ponds Gives the Town a Glacial Signature
Mendon combines rolling farm country with a county park famous for glacial landforms and a large nature preserve.
Read this note ->Nearby · History & Culture
Lima keeps a village-and-town identity in Livingston County
Lima's local story comes from the paired town and village layers, rural roads, and local government south of Monroe County.
Read this note ->Nearby · History & Culture
Henrietta Moves From West Woods to Campus
Henrietta's story connects West Woods settlement, Tinker Homestead, preserved farm memory, and RIT's move to a town campus.
Read this note ->Nearby · Home & Property
Avon Building Permits Need the Code Office Before Work Starts
Avon property owners should confirm building and zoning paperwork, plans, insurance proofs, inspections, and occupancy rules before starting work.
Read this note ->Nearby · The Outdoors
Caledonia’s Fish Hatchery Is a Working Conservation Landmark
Caledonia’s local texture includes a state fish hatchery, making conservation work part of the village-area identity.
Read this note ->Nearby · History & Culture
Avon Still Smells Like Its Spring-Town Past
Avon's identity comes from Genesee Valley settlement, old travel routes, and sulphur springs that once made it a wellness destination.
Read this note ->Nearby · Money & Taxes
Livingston Property Questions Start With the Assessor, Roll, and Tax Map Split
Livingston County explains that towns employ assessors while the county prepares rolls, tax bills, tax maps, and support data.
Read this note ->Property tax snapshot
Roughly $23–$25 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 $6,977–$7,589 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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