Last Updated: February 13, 2026
Calculate Your New York Mortgage Payment
Pre-filled with New York's median home price ($450,000) and property tax rate (1.72%). Adjust the values to match your situation.
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New York Mortgage Rates
Compare today's mortgage rates from top lenders in New York.
What Affects Your New York Mortgage Rate?
Credit Score
Higher scores get better rates
Down Payment
20%+ avoids PMI
Property Type
Primary homes get best rates
Loan Term
15-year has lower rates
Refinancing in New York
See if refinancing could lower your monthly payment or help you pay off your mortgage faster.
Good Time to Refinance
- Current rates are 0.5%+ lower than your rate
- Your credit score has improved significantly
- You want to switch from ARM to fixed-rate
- You plan to stay in your home 3+ more years
Consider Waiting If
- Rate difference is less than 0.5%
- You plan to sell within 2 years
- Closing costs exceed potential savings
- Your credit score has dropped
Refinancing costs typically range from 2-6% of your loan amount. Calculate your break-even point to ensure savings outweigh costs.
Compare New York Refinance RatesNew York Housing Market Overview
New York Different
Two very different markets. New York State has two distinct real estate markets: New York City (the most expensive and complex in the country) and everywhere else (more affordable, more typical). This guide covers both, but understand that buying in NYC is a completely different experience than buying upstate or on Long Island.
Highest closing costs in the nation. New York consistently ranks #1 for closing costs due to multiple taxes stacked on top of each other:
- Mortgage recording tax: 1.8% on loans under $500K, 1.925% on loans over $500K in NYC
- Transfer tax: 0.4% statewide, plus additional NYC taxes
- Mansion tax: 1-4.15% on purchases $1M+ (and $1M doesn't buy a mansion in Manhattan)
- Attorney fees: New York requires attorneys at closing (not optional)
On a $500,000 purchase with a $400,000 mortgage in NYC, expect $15,000-20,000+ in closing costs just from taxes alone.
Attorneys are mandatory. Unlike most states where title companies handle closings, New York requires both buyer and seller to have attorneys. Budget $2,000-4,000 for legal fees.
Co-ops dominate NYC. In Manhattan and much of Brooklyn/Queens, most apartments are co-ops (cooperatives), not condos. Co-ops are harder to finance, have strict board approval processes, and often require 20-50% down payments. We'll explain the difference below.
Property taxes vary wildly. NYC actually has relatively low property taxes (~0.9%), but Westchester, Nassau, and parts of Long Island have some of the highest in the country (2-3%+). A $600,000 home in Westchester might cost $15,000-18,000/year in property taxes alone.
New York Home Buyer Programs
SONYMA Low Interest Rate Program
- Benefit: Below-market 30-year fixed-rate mortgages
- Who qualifies: First-time buyers, income limits apply (vary by county — higher in NYC metro)
- Down payment: As low as 3%
- Website: hcr.ny.gov/sonyma
SONYMA Down Payment Assistance Loan (DPAL)
- Benefit: Up to $15,000 (or 3% of purchase price) for down payment/closing costs
- How it works: 0% interest, no monthly payments for 10 years, then forgiven 1/120th per month
- Must pair with: SONYMA first mortgage
- Website: hcr.ny.gov/down-payment-assistant-loan-dpal
SONYMA Achieving the Dream
- Benefit: Low down payment mortgages for lower-income first-time buyers
- Down payment: As low as 3%
- Income limits: Lower than standard SONYMA programs
- Website: hcr.ny.gov/achieving-dream-program
- Benefit: Forgivable loan up to $40,000 toward down payment or closing costs
- How it works: Forgiven over 10 years; if you stay 10+ years, you owe nothing
- Who qualifies: First-time buyers earning up to 80% of Area Median Income
- Property types: 1-4 family homes, condos, or co-ops in the five boroughs
- Must complete: Housing counseling through HPD-approved agency
- This is significant: $40,000 is one of the largest DPA grants in the country
- Website: nyc.gov/site/hpd/services-and-information/homefirst-down-payment-assistance-program.page
- Benefit: Grants up to $10,000 for down payment/closing costs
- Who qualifies: First-time buyers at or below 80% AMI
- How it works: Work with a participating lender
Tips for Buying a Home in New York
(January 2026)
Median home prices by area:
- Manhattan: $1.1M+ (condos); co-ops can be "cheaper" but with higher down payments
- Brooklyn: $850,000
- Queens: $650,000
- Long Island (Nassau): $650,000
- Long Island (Suffolk): $525,000
- Westchester: $700,000
- Hudson Valley: $425,000
- Buffalo: $250,000
- Albany: $285,000
- Syracuse: $210,000
Market trends:
- NYC market has stabilized after post-pandemic volatility
- Upstate cities (Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse) remain significantly more affordable
- Hudson Valley and the Catskills saw huge price increases during COVID remote work migration — now cooling
- Long Island inventory remains tight for single-family homes
Best value areas for 2026:
- Buffalo/Rochester (extremely affordable, growing economies)
- Syracuse area (university town, low prices)
- Capital Region (Albany, Troy, Schenectady)
- Hudson Valley (if you can find inventory)
- Outer Queens/Eastern Brooklyn (relative value compared to Manhattan)
Frequently Asked Questions About New York Mortgages
Explore Other State Mortgage Guides
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Affiliate Disclosure: AmCalc may receive compensation when you click on links to partner sites. This does not affect our editorial content or the rates you receive. All rates and terms are subject to lender approval.
Disclaimer: This calculator provides educational estimates only and does not constitute financial, legal, or tax advice. State-specific information is for general reference and may not reflect your individual situation. Actual loan terms, costs, and savings vary by lender, credit profile, and market conditions. Tax laws are complex and change frequently. Consult qualified professionals for personalized guidance.