New York Porch

Moving guide

Moving to New York is easier when you know which New York you are moving into.

The City, a Hudson Valley suburb, a Finger Lakes village, a North Country town, and a Long Island beach community all live under the same state flag, but the everyday rules can feel very different. This is the calm first pass.

Before you sign

Check property tax, STAR, flood risk, rent stabilization, co-op or condo rules, and any local permit issue that affects your plan.

First week

Set up utilities, change your mailing address, find your local assessor or city finance page, and save the official county/town links.

First month

If you become a New York resident and drive, DMV says to exchange an out-of-state license and register an out-of-state vehicle within 30 days. Line up insurance, inspection, and voter registration if they apply.

Before tax season

Confirm state residency, NYC or Yonkers residency, part-year filing, STAR registration, and any local income-tax filing details.

If you move to New York City

Learn the borough/neighborhood, NYC property-tax class, possible NYC resident income tax, co-op/condo rules, rent stabilization, and short-term rental limits.

If you move upstate

Learn the town, village if any, school district, equalization rate, county office, wells/septic, flood maps, snow and lake-effect patterns, and local permit rules.

If you move into the Adirondacks or near water

Check APA jurisdiction, shoreline setbacks, wetlands, floodplain rules, private wells, septic, and insurance before a project starts.

The big three to settle early

First, figure out your New York residency picture. Residency can turn on domicile, a permanent place of abode, and day counts, so remote workers and part-year movers should not wing it.

Second, find the local government that actually sends the bill. Outside New York City, the town or city assessor and school district matter. In the City, the Department of Finance and the tax class matter.

Third, if you bring a car, make the DMV paperwork its own errand. If you become a resident, license exchange, New York insurance, registration, inspection, plates, and title timing tend to connect.

Official sources

Reviewed July 2026. Moving, tax-residency, DMV, STAR, and local property rules depend on timing and address; confirm with the official agency or a qualified professional.

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