Living in Victor NY — Neighborhoods, Schools, Cost of Living & Quality of Life
Updated for 2026 — Everything You Need to Know Before Moving to Victor NY
Quick Victor fit-check: Jump to what matters most for your move.
- Researching schools first: Schools & Victor CSD
- Comparing neighborhoods and pockets: Neighborhoods & Micro-Areas
- Understanding the real monthly cost: Cost of Living, Taxes & Ontario County Advantage
- Curious about the housing market: Victor Housing Market & Home Styles
Victor NY is one of the fastest-moving lifestyle suburbs in the Greater Rochester area — known for top-rated schools, newer housing options, a strong trail network, and the convenience of being minutes from Eastview Mall, I-490, and the Finger Lakes.
If you’ve driven through the Village of Victor, grabbed dinner near Eastview, or taken a walk on one of the local trail systems, you already understand the appeal: Victor feels organized, easy to navigate, and built for day-to-day living. It’s the kind of town where you can run errands quickly, get outside after work, and still keep a realistic commute to Rochester, Canandaigua, Pittsford, or Henrietta.
At the same time, Victor isn’t a one-size-fits-all suburb. Some buyers love the newer subdivisions and townhome communities; others prefer older, established streets closer to the village or rural pockets with more privacy. The Ontario County tax structure, commute patterns, and neighborhood feel vary more than most people expect — especially when you start comparing Victor to Monroe County suburbs like Pittsford or Fairport.
In this 2026 guide, I’ll break down what it’s really like to live in Victor NY — including real neighborhood names, current cost and tax context, school specifics, trails, housing styles, lifestyle, and the most common challenges buyers run into.
Watch: Living in Victor NY
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1. Victor NY Overview
Victor sits in a sweet spot that a lot of relocating buyers are chasing: you’re close enough to Rochester to keep a real commute, but far enough out that you get more open space, newer housing, and a “suburb that works” feel. The town has grown significantly over the last two decades, and that growth shows up in the roads, neighborhoods, retail corridor, and trail network.
For many people, Victor starts with two things: schools and convenience. Victor Central School District is a major draw for buyers relocating to the Greater Rochester area, and the I-490 corridor makes it realistic to reach Pittsford, Brighton, Henrietta, Downtown Rochester, or the Finger Lakes on a daily basis.
One angle that doesn’t get enough attention: Victor is in Ontario County, not Monroe County. That distinction matters for property taxes. Ontario County rates are generally lower than comparable addresses in Monroe County suburbs like Pittsford or Fairport — and for buyers doing real monthly budgeting, that difference can be meaningful.
Victor also has internal variety that people don’t always appreciate at first. Newer subdivisions and townhome communities exist alongside village-adjacent streets with older character, and there are pockets where larger lots and more privacy are still achievable. The key is matching your lifestyle and daily routine to the right part of town — not just the name on the map.
2. Victor NY by the Numbers
Here are the real baseline figures that shape day-to-day life and budgeting in Victor. Use these as directional context — always verify specific tax bills and current market prices for any home you’re actually considering.
Population & Growth
The Town of Victor has grown to roughly 16,000+ residents. Victor has been one of the faster-growing communities in the Greater Rochester region over the past two decades, driven largely by newer housing development and school district demand. Current data is available at the U.S. Census QuickFacts page for Victor town.
Home Prices
Victor consistently trends higher than many Greater Rochester suburbs. Median sale prices have been in the $550,000–$650,000+ range in recent years, though the specific pocket and property type matter significantly. Newer single-family construction, townhomes, and golf-community homes each have their own pricing profiles. Victor’s pricing reflects both the school draw and a housing mix dominated by post-1990 construction.
Household Income
Victor benchmarks higher household incomes than most Greater Rochester communities, consistent with its pricing profile and school-driven demand. Per capita income in the town has been reported around $31,000–$35,000, with median household income well above the regional average. These figures shift over time; the Census QuickFacts link above is the cleanest source to verify current numbers.
Commute & Location
Most Victor residents can reach Downtown Rochester in 20–30 minutes under normal traffic conditions via I-490. The Thruway (I-90) at Exit 45 is nearby, which helps for travel toward Buffalo, Syracuse, or the Finger Lakes. The Frederick Douglass–Greater Rochester International Airport is roughly a 25-minute drive depending on where in Victor you live.
Sales Tax & County Context
Ontario County has a combined sales tax rate of 7.5%. More importantly for buyers: Ontario County property tax rates have historically run lower than Monroe County rates, which is one of the most underappreciated advantages Victor holds over comparable east-side Monroe County suburbs. This is covered in detail in the Cost of Living section below.
3. Neighborhoods & Micro-Areas in Victor NY
“I want to live in Victor” is usually the starting point, not the finish line. Two buyers can both choose Victor and end up with completely different daily lives depending on whether they prioritize school proximity, trail access, village character, low-maintenance living, or lot size. Here’s how the main pockets break down.
Drumlins — Established Neighborhood Convenience
The Drumlins area is a solid example of what many buyers picture when they think “Victor suburb” — established residential streets, a comfortable feel, and proximity to the services and commuting routes people rely on daily. Good mix of home styles and price points within one of Victor’s more recognizable communities.
Stone Brook — Traditional Layout, Long-Term Livability
Stone Brook appeals to buyers who want a traditional neighborhood layout and a place that feels easy to settle into long-term. The draw is often the combination of consistent home styles, neighborhood character, and access to Victor’s wider amenities without being in the middle of the commercial corridor.
High Line Park — Low-Maintenance, Modern Townhomes
High Line Park is one of Victor’s newer townhome-style communities, with modern layouts, reduced exterior upkeep, and easy access to shopping and commuting routes. Buyers drawn here are often downsizers, busy professionals, or anyone who wants Victor’s location without the full single-family maintenance load.
Gypsum Mills — Golf Community, Destination Energy
Gypsum Mills carries a distinct community identity — a golf-course anchor, an amenity-forward lifestyle, and a neighborhood feel that attracts buyers who want more than just a house on a street. If you want the “neighborhood as a destination” experience within Victor, this is one of the clearer examples.
Boughton Hill / Cobble Creek / Quail Ridge — Established Roots
Some of Victor’s more established neighborhoods — including Boughton Hill-area streets, Cobble Creek, and Quail Ridge — offer a different character than the newer subdivisions. These pockets often feature mature landscaping, more traditional lot configurations, and a slightly different pricing profile than newer construction. Good options for buyers who want the Victor school district without exclusively newer-build options.
Dorchester Park / Anton Valley / Stonington Ridge — Newer Subdivisions
For buyers specifically seeking newer construction, subdivisions like Dorchester Park, Anton Valley, and Stonington Ridge represent the growth-corridor side of Victor. These neighborhoods feature homes built post-1990 through more recent years, with open floor plans, larger primary suites, and the finishes most buyers associate with “newer Victor.” Some areas still have active construction; verify current inventory status with a local agent.
Village-Adjacent & Open-Space Pockets
Streets closer to the Village of Victor offer a more traditional small-town layout — sidewalks, older character, and quicker access to local businesses. On the other end, pockets heading toward the Farmington and Mendon edges of town offer larger lots and more privacy at a modest tradeoff in drive time. Neither is better; the right choice depends entirely on how you actually want to live day to day.
4. Victor Housing Market & Home Styles
Victor’s housing market is shaped by two consistent forces: school-driven demand and a housing stock that skews newer than most Greater Rochester suburbs. The result is a market that often feels competitive, especially for homes that show well, price realistically, and check the most common buyer boxes — open kitchens, primary suites, finished basements, home offices, and turnkey condition.
Typical market absorption in Victor runs tight — well-priced homes have historically moved in under three weeks, and inventory tends to stay low relative to demand. That’s a pattern worth understanding before you start touring.
Here’s what you’ll typically find across the Victor housing mix:
Newer Colonials & Two-Story Homes
The dominant home type in Victor’s subdivisions — built largely from the 1990s through today. Attached garages, larger primary suites, more open floor plans, and modern mechanicals are common. These homes drive the higher end of the market but also tend to generate strong competition when priced well.
Townhomes & Low-Maintenance Options
Victor has a solid townhome market, popular with downsizers, busy professionals, and buyers who want predictable exterior upkeep. High Line Park is one example, though other community-based townhome options exist across the town. HOA fees and coverage vary — always review the documents before committing.
Village-Pocket & Established Homes
Closer to the Village of Victor, you’ll find older, more traditional homes with smaller footprints and different character than the subdivision stock. These often appeal to buyers who want the school district without purely newer-build options and sometimes offer a different price profile.
Larger-Lot & Semi-Rural Properties
On the outer edges of Victor — particularly heading toward Farmington and Mendon — you can still find homes where privacy and land are part of the value proposition. These properties are less common and require more intentional searching, but they exist for buyers who want more space without going fully rural.
Understanding how local agents and appraisers evaluate comparable sales is especially important in Victor, where a newer subdivision colonial and a village-pocket ranch can carry very different values even at the same bedroom count. My guide to how to determine the market value of a home breaks down the basics in a practical way — and if you’re leaning toward new construction specifically, read my new construction home buying tips before you tour model homes or sign with a builder.
🏡 Browse Victor NY Homes for Sale See current listings, prices & available inventory in Victor →Thinking About Buying in Victor NY?
Kyle Hiscock has helped buyers navigate Victor’s neighborhoods and market for years. Call (585) 704-7095 or reach out online — Hiscock Homes at REMAX Realty Group.
Talk to a Victor Area Expert5. Cost of Living, Property Taxes & the Ontario County Advantage
For most Victor buyers, cost of living comes down to three things: housing costs, property taxes, and utilities. Victor runs higher on the housing side than many older-suburb options in the Rochester area — but the property tax picture is one of the most important and least-discussed advantages Victor holds over Monroe County alternatives.
Housing Costs
Expect to pay more for Victor than many west-side and north-side Rochester suburbs — and more than some east-side towns with older housing stock. The premium reflects newer construction, school-driven demand, and the Ontario County tax advantage baked into the value. Median sale prices in recent years have run in the $550,000–$650,000+ range, with meaningful variation by pocket and property type. New construction and golf-community homes can push well above those figures.
The Ontario County Tax Advantage
This is the single most underappreciated financial factor in the Victor vs. Monroe County suburb comparison. Ontario County property tax rates have historically run lower than equivalent Monroe County rates — which means a buyer comparing a $600,000 Victor home to a $600,000 Pittsford or Fairport home is not looking at equivalent annual tax bills. The Ontario County structure has been a documented driver of Victor’s growth and a reason many buyers who do real math on total monthly cost land on Victor over comparable Monroe County options. Always verify the current tax bill and applicable exemptions for any specific property — the town publishes rate information, and Ontario County has online assessment lookup tools.
STAR Exemptions & Assessment Reality
New York State’s STAR (School Tax Relief) program applies in Victor as it does across the state and can meaningfully reduce the school portion of your tax bill if you qualify. Assessment and market value in New York aren’t always the same number — understanding how your assessed value relates to what a home is actually worth on the market matters for budgeting. My guide on appraised value vs. assessed value vs. market value explains the distinction in plain English.
Utilities & Seasonal Costs
Utility costs in Victor reflect Western NY realities: long heating seasons, humid summers, and meaningful variation based on home age, square footage, and mechanical systems. Larger newer colonials can carry higher utility bills than older, smaller homes despite being better-insulated, simply because of sheer square footage. Budget for heating, central air, snow removal, and the ongoing maintenance costs that come with any home. My breakdown of how much it costs to buy a home walks through the full picture including expenses most buyers forget.
6. Jobs, Commute & Location Advantages
Victor’s location is one of its biggest practical selling points. Whether you’re commuting to Rochester hospitals, university campuses, Henrietta job corridors, or working remotely a few days a week, the I-490 and Thruway access makes Victor significantly more connected than its Ontario County address might suggest.
Key location advantages buyers consistently mention:
I-490 Access
Makes it straightforward to reach Pittsford, Brighton, Henrietta, and Downtown Rochester. Most east and southeast commutes stay under 30 minutes in normal traffic, making Victor realistic for a wide range of employer destinations.
Thruway (I-90) Proximity — Exit 45
Helpful if your work or family life pulls you toward Syracuse, Buffalo, or other parts of New York. Having Thruway access without fighting city traffic to get there is a quiet but meaningful quality-of-life factor.
Eastview & Local Employment Hub
The Eastview Mall corridor and surrounding development create local employment and reduce how often you need to drive into Rochester for errands. For buyers who value walk-to-dinner or quick weekend errands, this part of Victor punches above its weight compared to more purely residential suburbs.
Finger Lakes Gateway
Weekend trips to Canandaigua, Seneca Lake, Keuka, Bristol Mountain, or the wine trails are quick from Victor — typically 20–30 minutes south or east depending on the destination. If you’re exploring the broader Finger Lakes lifestyle alongside a Rochester suburb decision, my guide on moving to the Finger Lakes region offers a helpful comparison of what that lifestyle looks like versus a suburban base.
Remote and hybrid work has made Victor’s location even more attractive. When you only commute two or three days per week, the question shifts from “how is the traffic” to “how does the town feel on the days I’m here” — and Victor holds up well on that test.
7. Schools & Education in Victor NY
For many families, Victor starts and ends with the schools. Victor Central School District is one of the primary reasons buyers target the town, and it directly influences both demand levels and pricing. If schools are central to your move, go beyond the third-party rating sites — confirm boundaries for the specific address you’re considering, and look at the programs that actually matter for your child.
Victor CSD — District Overview
Victor Central School District serves the full town and village. The district spends approximately $15,000+ per student annually and maintains a strong regional reputation. District accountability data is available at the NYSED Data site for Victor CSD.
School Buildings & Grade Configurations
Victor CSD operates four school buildings, all located at or near 953 High Street: Victor Primary School (Grades K–3), Victor Intermediate School (Grades 4–6), Victor Junior High School (Grades 7–8), and Victor Senior High School (Grades 9–12). Having the middle and high school on the same campus is worth noting for families thinking about school-morning logistics and activity pickup.
Academic Programs & Offerings
Victor CSD offers a range of academic programs including Advanced Placement coursework at the high school level, arts and music programs across grade levels, and competitive athletic programs in the Section V landscape. For a full current program overview, the district’s academics page is the authoritative source: Victor CSD Academics.
Three Practical Steps for Relocating Families
Confirm the district for the exact address you’re considering — don’t assume based on zip code or a listing headline. Review the programs that match your child’s grade level and interests. And drive the school route at 7:30am on a weekday; Victor is convenient overall, but specific pockets can have different traffic patterns during school drop-off that affect how a neighborhood feels in practice.
If you’re comparing Victor CSD alongside other Greater Rochester districts as part of your suburb search, my guide to the best school districts near Rochester NY walks through how Pittsford, Penfield, Brighton, Fairport, Webster, and Victor stack up from a buyer’s perspective.
🏫 Local insight: Victor is often a top pick for school-focused buyers who also want Ontario County taxes and newer housing. That combination is harder to find than people expect — most comparable school districts in the region sit in Monroe County, where the tax structure is different.
8. Lifestyle, Trails, Parks, Shopping & Things to Do
Victor is one of those towns where your lifestyle options feel built in. You don’t have to plan a day trip to get outside, and you don’t have to drive far to handle errands or find a decent dinner. That combination shows up in daily life in ways listing photos never capture.
Trails & Outdoor Access
Victor’s trail network is one of its most underrated features. The town maintains an extensive system for recreation and neighborhood connectivity — and for many residents, the ability to get outside without loading up a car is a meaningful part of daily life. The Town of Victor trails page is the best current resource for maps and conditions.
Ganondagan State Historic Site
Ganondagan State Historic Site is one of the cultural anchors of Victor that many newcomers don’t discover until after they move in. This NYS historic site is dedicated to Seneca and Haudenosaunee history and culture, with trails, programming, and a longhouse on-site. It’s a genuinely meaningful destination, not just a historical marker.
Eastview, Dining & Everyday Convenience
Victor is one of the most convenient suburbs in the region for shopping and dining. Eastview Mall and the surrounding Route 96 commercial corridor mean you can handle most errands quickly — grocery, hardware, medical, dining — without a trip into Rochester. That’s a real time advantage on weekday evenings and weekends.
Finger Lakes Weekend Access
Canandaigua Lake, the wine trails, Bristol Mountain, and the broader Finger Lakes region are all easy weekend trips from Victor — usually 20–35 minutes depending on the destination. For buyers who want a suburban base with genuine outdoor variety, Victor’s geography is genuinely hard to beat within the Rochester metro.
9. Climate & Weather Realities in Victor NY
Victor is in the same general weather pattern as the Greater Rochester region: true four seasons, real winter, and a summer that can be warm and humid. If you’re relocating from a milder climate, the biggest adjustment is usually winter logistics — not just the cold, but the fact that winter is long and you need a real plan for snow, vehicles, and home maintenance.
Snow & Winter
Victor is generally a bit less lake-effect-influenced than communities closer to Lake Ontario, but snow is still real and frequent. Plan for regular plowing or shoveling, winter tires or all-seasons with real tread, and the kind of home maintenance that Western NY winters require — gutters, grading, roof condition, and basement drainage are all worth evaluating carefully during a home inspection.
Spring, Summer & Fall
Spring and fall are genuinely excellent here — locals who’ve lived through the winters will tell you the other three seasons feel like a reward. Summer brings long evenings, outdoor activity, and humidity spikes on certain days. Central air matters in larger two-story homes, and it’s worth confirming the system’s age and condition on any home you’re considering.
10. Pros & Cons of Living in Victor NY
Victor is popular for real reasons — but like any community, it has tradeoffs worth knowing before you commit. Here’s the honest version.
✅ Strong School Draw
Victor CSD is a primary reason families target the town and a real contributor to long-term demand and resale value.
✅ Ontario County Tax Advantage
Generally lower property tax rates than Monroe County suburbs at similar price points. For buyers doing real monthly budgeting, this can meaningfully change the total cost picture compared to Pittsford or Fairport.
✅ Newer Housing Options
More modern layouts, townhomes, and newer construction than most Rochester-area suburbs. If you want post-1990 housing with open floor plans and fewer immediate projects, Victor has more inventory in that range than most comparable towns.
✅ Trails, Convenience & Finger Lakes Access
Strong trail network, Eastview-corridor convenience, and easy weekend access to the Finger Lakes make daily and weekend life feel genuinely easy. Not every suburb in this price range offers all three.
⚠️ Pricing Runs Competitive
School-driven demand keeps well-priced Victor homes moving quickly. This is not a market where you can afford to “think about it for a week” once the right home appears. Buyers who aren’t pre-approved and ready to act tend to be disappointed.
⚠️ Not Every Pocket Feels the Same
Some areas are quiet and residential, others commercial-adjacent, others more open-space. Choosing “Victor” without specifying which pocket of Victor is how buyers end up in the wrong daily life.
⚠️ Newer Doesn’t Mean Maintenance-Free
Larger newer homes come with larger replacement costs when roofs, HVAC systems, and other big-ticket items age out. Budget accordingly — a 15-year-old colonial with original mechanicals is not the same as a turnkey home even if the kitchen looks great.
11. Common Buyer Challenges in Victor NY
Victor buyers run into a few predictable challenges — not because Victor is difficult, but because demand and neighborhood differences can catch online researchers off guard.
Waiting Too Long on the Right Home
In school-driven markets, the best listings don’t sit around while buyers decide. If you’re not pre-approved and mentally ready to make a strong offer, you’re not ready to shop in Victor.
Underestimating the Full Monthly Number
The mortgage payment is not the whole number. Tax bill, utilities, HOA (if applicable), insurance, and maintenance are all part of the real monthly cost. Two Victor homes at the same price can feel very different monthly depending on assessments, exemptions, and home age.
Comparing Unlike Properties
Townhomes vs. single-family colonials, newer subdivisions vs. established village streets — the comparable sales need to be genuinely apples-to-apples. Buyers who try to use the wrong comps to negotiate end up frustrated when the market data doesn’t support their position.
Over-Focusing on Cosmetics
Even newer Victor homes can have real issues: grading and drainage problems, builder-quality items aging out, basement moisture patterns, and HVAC systems approaching replacement. A thorough inspection matters regardless of how new a home looks.
If you’re earlier in the buying process and want to avoid common mistakes across the full buyer journey, my guide to top home buying FAQs is a useful primer before you start actively touring.
12. Local Agent Tips for Buying in Victor NY
If you want to buy well in Victor — meaning you get the right home, in the right pocket, at a price that makes sense — here are the practical tips I give buyers working through this market.
Start With Lifestyle, Not Just Schools
Schools are a legitimate priority — but within Victor, they’re largely consistent across the district. The real differentiator is which pocket of Victor matches how you actually live: trails vs. village feel, low-maintenance vs. lot size, subdivision vs. established street.
Build Your Budget With Ontario County Taxes in the Number
Look up the actual tax bill on any home you’re seriously considering — not an estimate, the real number. Factor in STAR exemptions if applicable. Then build your monthly comfort number from there, not backward from an online mortgage calculator that doesn’t know Ontario County rates.
Be Intentional About “Newer” vs. “Established”
Newer means modern layouts and fewer immediate projects. Established often means different character and potentially a different price point. Neither is better — but buyers who drift between the two comparisons end up confused about value.
Tour With Purpose, Not Just Photos
Walk the street, look at traffic patterns, and imagine school mornings and winter driving — not just the kitchen. Drive any neighborhood you’re seriously considering at 7:30am and 4:30pm on a weekday. Victor pockets can feel completely different depending on school traffic and commuter flow.
🔑 Local tip: When buyers tell me they want Victor for the schools, the first follow-up question I ask is about lifestyle: trails, low-maintenance, or a bigger lot? The answer narrows the neighborhood list fast — and it matters as much as the school district itself once you’re actually living there.
13. Victor NY Frequently Asked Questions
Is Victor NY a good place to live?
For many buyers, yes — especially those who prioritize strong schools, newer housing options, Ontario County tax rates, and easy access to both Rochester employment and the Finger Lakes. Whether it’s the right fit depends on your budget, lifestyle priorities, and which part of Victor matches how you actually want to live day to day.
Are property taxes lower in Victor NY than in Pittsford or Fairport?
Generally, yes. Victor is in Ontario County, which has historically carried lower property tax rates than Monroe County, where Pittsford and Fairport are located. For buyers comparing total monthly costs between similar-priced homes, the Ontario County tax structure can make a meaningful difference. Always verify the specific tax bill on any home you’re considering — assessments and exemptions vary by property.
What school district is Victor NY in?
The Town of Victor is served by Victor Central School District (Victor CSD). The district operates four buildings serving grades K–12, all near 953 High Street. Always confirm the district assignment for any specific address you’re considering — don’t rely solely on zip code or listing headlines.
How far is Victor NY from Rochester?
Most Victor addresses are roughly 20–30 minutes from Downtown Rochester under normal traffic conditions via I-490. The Thruway (I-90) at Exit 45 provides additional regional access. Exact times depend on where in Victor you live and where in Rochester you’re commuting to.
What are home prices like in Victor NY?
Victor tends to run higher than many Greater Rochester suburbs, with recent median sale prices in the $550,000–$650,000+ range. Pricing varies significantly by neighborhood, property type, condition, and age of construction. Townhomes, established village-area homes, and newer subdivision colonials all carry different price profiles within the same town.
Should I rent first before buying in Victor if I’m relocating?
It depends on your timeline and how much research you can do before arriving. Some relocating buyers rent to learn the micro-areas before committing; others buy confidently after thorough neighborhood research and working with a local agent who knows the pockets well. If your move is school-timed, buying sooner may make more sense — but only if you feel genuinely clear on your priorities and the specific neighborhood you want.
14. Annual Update Checklist
Victor’s character stays consistent, but the numbers shift. If you’re researching now but moving later, re-check these items annually — or any time your timeline changes significantly.
✓ Recent comparable sales in the specific pocket you’re targeting (not town-wide averages).
✓ Property tax bills and exemptions for any home you’re actively comparing.
✓ School boundary confirmation for any specific address on your shortlist.
✓ New development and road changes that could affect traffic or neighborhood feel — Victor has been active on both fronts.
✓ Trail system and community project updates — Victor continues to invest in quality-of-life infrastructure.
15. Final Thoughts on Living in Victor NY
Victor is popular because it’s practical. It’s a town where the schools are strong, the Ontario County tax structure works in buyers’ favor, the trail network actually gets used, and daily life feels convenient instead of complicated. For many buyers — especially those relocating to the Greater Rochester area from out of state — Victor hits an unusual combination: newer housing, school credibility, and a location that genuinely bridges Rochester and the Finger Lakes.
The best way to choose Victor well is to go one layer deeper than the town name. Pick the pocket that matches your real routine, build your budget with Ontario County taxes and utilities included, and use local comparable sales to stay grounded on price. When Victor fits, it tends to fit for a long time — and that’s exactly why it stays consistently competitive.
If you’re thinking about moving to Victor NY and want help narrowing down neighborhoods, comparing home styles, and building a plan that fits your timeline, reach out — I’d be glad to help you figure out which part of Victor is the right fit.
Ready to Find the Right Home in Victor NY?
Kyle Hiscock at Hiscock Homes at REMAX Realty Group has helped buyers navigate Victor’s neighborhoods, schools, and market conditions for years. Call (585) 704-7095 or reach out online to get started.
Contact Kyle About Victor NY