Home
Hiscock Homes at REMAX Realty Group

Greater Rochester NY Townhomes for Sale

Low-Maintenance Living • Attached Garages • End Units • HOA Communities • New Construction

Pittsford & Brighton Victor & Farmington Fairport & Penfield Webster & Greece First-Floor Primary Options Lock-and-Leave Lifestyle
5.0★ Rated
443+ Verified Closings
14+ Years Full-Time Rochester Agent
REMAX Hall of Fame

Property Search

39 Properties Found
Sort By:

Townhomes in Greater Rochester NY: A Complete Buyer's Guide

Townhomes occupy a unique position in the Greater Rochester real estate market — offering more space, more privacy, and more ownership than a condo, while providing lower maintenance, lower price points, and a community feel that a freestanding single-family home in the same neighborhood would cost significantly more to deliver. For first-time buyers, downsizers, professionals who travel frequently, and anyone who values low-maintenance living without sacrificing livable space, townhomes are often the most practical entry point into Rochester homeownership.

Rochester's townhome inventory is diverse — from mid-century attached units in established Monroe County neighborhoods to newer master-planned townhome communities in Victor, Farmington, and Penfield, to luxury end-unit townhomes in Pittsford with canal views and premium finishes. Price points range from the low $200,000s for entry-level options in Greece and Irondequoit to $500,000+ for premium new-construction end units in Ontario County's most desirable communities.

One of the most common decisions townhome buyers face is the rent vs. buy calculation — whether to continue renting or commit to ownership in this property type. Our Rochester NY rent vs. buy calculator can help you model the financial comparison for your specific situation before you begin your search in earnest.

Townhome vs. Condo: What's the Difference in Rochester NY?

The terms "townhome" and "condo" are frequently used interchangeably in casual conversation and even in some MLS listings — but they represent meaningfully different ownership structures with different implications for what you own, what the HOA is responsible for, how you insure the property, and how you eventually sell it. Understanding the distinction before you make an offer is important. And if you're also thinking about the eventual sale side, our guide to selling a condo in Rochester NY covers the marketing and pricing considerations that apply to both condos and many townhome communities.

What You Typically Own in a Townhome

  • The interior of your unit from the walls inward
  • The land beneath your unit and sometimes a private yard or patio (varies by community)
  • Your attached garage (in most communities)
  • A proportional share of the common areas through HOA membership
  • Structural walls and roof may be shared responsibility — varies by declaration

How Townhomes Differ from Condos

  • Layout: townhomes are typically multi-story with private entries; condos are often single-floor units in larger buildings
  • Land ownership: townhome owners often own the land beneath; condo owners typically own only airspace
  • HOA structure: condos typically have the HOA insure the building shell; townhome HOA coverage varies widely
  • Financing: condos have additional lender eligibility requirements (warrantability) that townhomes typically do not
  • Insurance: townhome owners often need a hybrid HO-6/HO-3 policy; condo owners need an HO-6 policy

Important: In Rochester's MLS, some attached properties are listed as "townhomes" but recorded as condominiums for legal and financing purposes — and vice versa. The physical appearance of the property (multi-level, private entry, attached garage) does not always match its legal ownership structure. Always verify the legal structure and review the declaration of covenants before making an offer — this determines your insurance requirements, financing eligibility, and what the HOA is actually responsible for.

Types of Townhomes for Sale in Greater Rochester NY

Rochester's townhome inventory is more varied than buyers sometimes expect — each type involves different trade-offs on price, privacy, maintenance responsibility, layout, and lifestyle. Understanding which type fits your situation focuses your search and prevents you from touring homes that don't match what you actually need.

Traditional Multi-Level Townhome

The most common townhome style in Rochester — two or three stories with living areas on the main level and bedrooms above. Private entrance, typically an attached or built-in garage, and shared walls on one or both sides with neighbors. This style offers the most square footage per dollar in the townhome category and the closest feel to a single-family home in terms of layout and privacy.

Typical range: $210,000–$450,000 depending on community and finish level.

End-Unit Townhome

An end unit shares only one wall with a neighbor rather than two, offering more windows, more natural light, a side yard or side exposure, and a greater sense of privacy. End units command a premium — typically $15,000–$40,000 above interior units in the same community — but for buyers sensitive to noise transmission or natural light, the premium is often worthwhile. End units are the first to sell in most Rochester townhome communities and carry the strongest resale values.

Typical premium: $15,000–$40,000 over interior units in the same community. Highest demand, lowest inventory.

Patio-Style & First-Floor Primary Townhomes

Some townhome communities in Rochester are designed with the primary suite on the main level — combining the lower maintenance of townhome living with the accessibility of a first-floor bedroom. Others are single-level (essentially patio homes marketed as townhomes). These are especially popular with downsizers and buyers planning for aging-in-place, and they tend to command a premium relative to traditional multi-level layouts in the same community.

Best for: Downsizers, retirees, and accessibility-focused buyers who want low HOA maintenance with main-level bedroom access.

New Construction Townhomes

Several Rochester-area builders offer new construction townhomes — particularly in Victor, Farmington, Penfield, and Canandaigua — with open-concept main levels, modern kitchens, two-car garages, energy-efficient systems, and builder warranties. New construction townhomes start at approximately $300,000–$350,000 for standard floor plans in active communities, rising to $450,000–$550,000+ for premium layouts and locations. Our guide to buying a new construction home covers the full process.

Typical range: $300,000–$550,000+ all-in including lot premiums and design center selections.

Why Buyers Choose Townhomes in Greater Rochester NY

Townhome buyers come from diverse backgrounds and choose this property type for different reasons — but several themes appear consistently across the buyer pool in Rochester's market. Understanding which of these resonates with your situation helps clarify whether a townhome is the right fit.

Low-Maintenance Ownership

The defining appeal for the majority of townhome buyers. HOA-managed lawn care, snow removal, and exterior maintenance mean no weekend obligation to mow, blow, or shovel — a particularly compelling advantage for busy professionals, frequent travelers, buyers who are physically unable to manage yard work, and anyone who simply wants to own without the upkeep burden of a freestanding home.

Entry-Level Ownership in Desirable Communities

A townhome in Pittsford or Fairport often represents a buyer's most affordable path into a community where freestanding single-family homes start significantly higher. For first-time buyers who want to buy in a community with strong schools, walkable amenities, and established neighborhood character, a townhome is frequently the only entry point at a realistic price. Building equity in a desirable ZIP code through a townhome purchase is a legitimate long-term strategy.

More Space Than a Condo or Apartment

Townhomes typically offer 1,200–2,200+ square feet of living space across multiple floors — significantly more than most condo or apartment options at the same price point, and often with a garage, basement, and private outdoor space that neither a condo nor an apartment provides. For renters making the transition to ownership, a townhome often delivers a step up in space and functionality without the full commitment of a single-family home purchase.

Community Feel with Private Living

Well-managed townhome communities in Rochester offer the social benefit of neighbors in close proximity — community events, shared amenities, walking paths — with the privacy of a private entrance, a separate garage, and walls (rather than open-air corridors) between units. For buyers who moved from urban apartments and found suburban isolation jarring, or for buyers who value community connection alongside private homeownership, townhomes often strike the right balance.

Lock-and-Leave Lifestyle

For buyers who travel frequently for work or leisure, the ability to lock the door and leave without worrying about lawn or snow is a genuine quality-of-life benefit. The HOA handles exterior maintenance whether you're home or not — no coming home to a foot of snow in the driveway or a lawn that's been unmowed for three weeks while you were away. This appeal is particularly strong among empty nesters, professionals with significant travel schedules, and buyers who split time between Rochester and a second location.

Downsizing Without Sacrificing Space

Buyers moving from a 2,500-square-foot single-family home often struggle with a dramatic square footage reduction. A townhome at 1,600–2,000 square feet represents a more gradual right-sizing — less than the original home, but enough space for a guest room, a home office, and comfortable everyday living — without the year-round maintenance burden they're specifically trying to escape. The garage, basement, and private outdoor space that townhomes provide also make storage and lifestyle continuity more manageable.

Where to Find Townhomes in Greater Rochester NY

Townhome inventory in Rochester is concentrated in a handful of communities — with each offering a distinct lifestyle, price tier, and community character. Here is where to focus depending on what matters most to you.

Pittsford

Pittsford has the most premium townhome and patio home inventory in Monroe County — canal-adjacent communities, walkable village access, and well-maintained HOA developments with strong resale track records. Townhomes here range from $350,000 to $600,000+ for the most desirable units. They compete with a very active buyer pool and often sell quickly. First-time buyers looking for their most affordable Pittsford entry point, and downsizers who want the full village experience without single-family upkeep, are both well-served by this community's townhome market.

Fairport/Perinton & Penfield

The east Monroe County corridor has a growing number of townhome and patio-style communities at a range of price points — from entry-level options in the $250,000–$320,000 range to newer developments with premium finishes in the $380,000–$480,000 range. Fairport's walkable canal-village character extends the appeal of townhome living there beyond pure maintenance convenience — buyers get a neighborhood they can genuinely engage with. Penfield offers more traditional townhome communities near major commercial corridors.

Webster & Greece

Webster and Greece offer accessible townhome price points — typically $210,000–$360,000 — with a range of community ages, HOA fee structures, and garage configurations. Webster's townhome communities benefit from the town's strong school district and reasonable property taxes. Greece offers the widest entry-level inventory in the Monroe County townhome market, with multiple established communities from the 1980s–2000s that deliver good square footage per dollar for buyers whose priority is value over prestige.

Victor & Farmington

Ontario County's Victor and Farmington corridor has seen significant new townhome development over the last decade — master-planned communities with modern floor plans, two-car garages, open-concept main levels, and club amenities that appeal strongly to younger buyers and active adults alike. Victor Central School District access alongside Ontario County's favorable tax structure makes this area a compelling choice for buyers who want a newer townhome product at competitive price points. Several communities here offer first-floor primary layouts specifically for the downsizer market.

Brighton & Irondequoit

Brighton and Irondequoit have smaller but established townhome and attached housing inventories — generally older communities from the 1970s–1990s that offer strong value per square foot and proximity to the University of Rochester, Strong Memorial Hospital, and the city's cultural corridor. These communities tend to attract buyers who are more location-motivated than lifestyle-motivated — specifically buyers who need to be close to UR, Strong, or downtown Rochester and want owned, attached housing at a reasonable price point.

Understanding HOA Fees, Coverage & Documents Before You Buy

The HOA is the most consequential factor in any townhome purchase — it defines what you pay monthly, what you're responsible for maintaining, what rules govern how you live, and what risks a poorly-managed association can create. Understanding how your full monthly payment is calculated — principal, interest, taxes, insurance, and HOA — is the starting point for honest affordability analysis on any townhome.

Typical HOA Coverage in Rochester Townhomes

  • Lawn mowing, edging, and fertilization
  • Snow removal from driveways, walks, and parking areas
  • Common area landscaping and maintenance
  • Exterior building maintenance (varies — some cover roofs and siding; many do not)
  • Amenities: pool, clubhouse, fitness center (premium communities)
  • Master insurance policy on building exteriors (varies by community)

What HOA Fees Do NOT Cover (Your Responsibility)

  • Furnace, AC, water heater, and appliances
  • Interior plumbing and electrical
  • Windows and exterior doors (varies by declaration)
  • Your personal property and liability (HO-6 insurance)
  • Garage door mechanisms and maintenance
  • Deck and patio maintenance (if private to your unit)

Critical Documents to Request

  • Declaration of Covenants (CC&Rs) — defines ownership and responsibilities
  • Bylaws and Rules & Regulations — governs daily living and HOA governance
  • Current operating budget — confirm the HOA is financially healthy
  • Reserve fund study and current balance — assess capital project readiness
  • 12 months of board meeting minutes — reveals pending projects or disputes
  • Master insurance policy certificate and deductible amount

Typical HOA Fee Ranges in Rochester Townhome Communities

  • Entry-level communities (Greece, Irondequoit, Chili): $150–$250/month
  • Mid-range communities (Webster, Penfield, Fairport): $250–$400/month
  • Premium communities (Pittsford, Victor new construction): $350–$600+/month
  • Luxury/resort amenity communities: $500–$800+/month

Important: An underfunded HOA reserve is one of the most significant hidden risks in any townhome purchase. A community with a $50,000 reserve fund facing $400,000 in upcoming roof replacements will need a special assessment — a one-time charge to all owners that can run $5,000–$20,000+ per unit. Always ask for the reserve fund study and compare the current balance to projected capital needs before making an offer. This single question can save you from a very expensive surprise post-closing.

Townhome Insurance: What You Need & What the HOA Covers

Townhome insurance is more nuanced than standard single-family homeowner's insurance — and misunderstanding the division between the HOA's master policy and your personal HO-6 policy is a common source of underinsurance among townhome owners. Our guide to red flags to look for when buying a Rochester home touches on insurance concerns; the following is a detailed breakdown specific to townhome ownership.

The HOA Master Policy

Most townhome HOAs carry a master insurance policy that covers the exterior of the buildings — structure, roof, common areas. The key question is whether this policy is "bare walls in" (covering only the structure up to the interior walls, leaving everything inside your unit to your personal policy) or "all-in" (covering original fixtures and finishes inside units). Request a certificate of insurance from the HOA and have your insurance agent review it before closing. Also check the master policy deductible — if it's $10,000–$25,000, your HO-6 policy needs to cover that gap.

Your HO-6 Policy (Personal Coverage)

As a townhome owner, you need an HO-6 insurance policy covering: your personal property and belongings, interior walls and finishes (especially if the HOA uses bare-walls-in coverage), liability protection for injuries occurring inside your unit, loss assessment coverage (for special assessments stemming from shared events), and the master policy deductible. HO-6 policies for Rochester-area townhomes typically run $600–$1,500/year depending on coverage limits and your unit's value.

Loss Assessment Coverage

This is one of the most overlooked — and most important — coverages for townhome owners. If a covered event (fire, storm, liability claim) results in costs that exceed the HOA's master policy limits, the HOA can assess each unit owner for a proportional share. Loss assessment coverage on your HO-6 policy covers your portion of these charges up to your coverage limit. A standard HO-6 includes some loss assessment coverage, but verify that the limit is sufficient relative to the community's master policy structure.

Inspecting a Townhome in Rochester NY: Key Items to Evaluate

A standard home inspection is as important on a townhome as on any other property. Several inspection items are particularly relevant or unique to the townhome format — shared walls, limited exterior access, and HOA-managed systems all create specific things to evaluate.

Sound Transmission & Wall Construction

Shared walls are the defining characteristic of townhome living — and their sound insulation quality varies enormously between communities and eras of construction. Visit the unit at a time when you might be able to hear neighboring activity. Ask the seller directly about noise transmission history. Older communities built in the 1970s–1980s frequently have less sound insulation than newer construction. If sound sensitivity is a concern, asking about wall construction type (concrete block vs. wood frame with insulation) is a practical pre-inspection question.

HVAC Age & Condition

The furnace, central AC, and water heater are your responsibility regardless of HOA coverage. Ask the seller for the age and service history of all three systems. Furnaces last 15–20 years, AC units 12–15 years, water heaters 10–12 years. A full replacement of all three systems on a townhome can easily run $10,000–$18,000 — a significant cost to factor into your offer analysis if any of them are approaching end of life. Also check whether the unit has its own dedicated HVAC or shares any systems with other units.

Roof Condition

Confirm whether the roof is the HOA's responsibility or yours — this varies by community declaration and is one of the most important things to clarify before purchase. If the HOA is responsible, check the reserve fund for roof replacement funding. If the roof is your responsibility, a roofing inspection as part of your home inspection is essential. Roof replacement on a townhome unit typically runs $6,000–$14,000 depending on unit size and configuration.

Basement & Below-Grade Conditions

Many Rochester townhomes have full or partial basements — a significant functional asset but also a potential moisture concern. Look for water intrusion indicators: staining at wall bases, efflorescence, musty odor, or active sump pump evidence. In communities where the building's drainage systems are HOA-managed, understand who is responsible for addressing water intrusion — the HOA for exterior drainage failures, or the owner for interior waterproofing.

Garage & Entry Conditions

Verify that the attached garage is actually the right size for your vehicles — older townhome garages from the 1980s are frequently designed for smaller cars and may not accommodate a full-size truck or SUV. Check the garage door mechanism age and condition (door opener replacement runs $300–$600). Also verify the entry configuration: is there a step up from the garage into the unit? Useful to know upfront for accessibility considerations.

For New Construction: Blue Tape Walk-Through

New construction townhomes still require a pre-drywall inspection and a thorough final walk-through before closing. Our new construction final walk-through checklist gives you a room-by-room framework to document every deficiency before you close. In a multi-unit building, also verify that common area finishes, shared entry elements, and any HOA amenities are complete and functional before your closing date.

Financing a Townhome in Rochester NY

Most townhome purchases in Rochester use standard residential financing — conventional, FHA, or VA loans — without complications. However, the legal structure of the community (condominium-form vs. planned unit development) can affect financing eligibility, and a few additional nuances apply. Our guide to how much it costs to buy a home in Rochester NY covers the full purchase cost picture that applies here.

Condominium Form vs. PUD

A townhome recorded as a condominium requires the project to be "warrantable" — meeting Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac guidelines for owner-occupancy ratios, HOA financial health, and insurance coverage — for conventional financing to apply. A townhome in a Planned Unit Development (PUD) does not face this additional hurdle. Your lender will determine the project type and eligibility during underwriting — which is why confirming the legal structure early is important if you have a specific loan program in mind.

First-Time Buyers

Townhomes are one of the most common first purchase for Rochester buyers — accessible price points, low maintenance, and often in communities with strong schools and neighborhood amenities. FHA loans with 3.5% down and SONYMA New York State first-time buyer programs are frequently used in the $220,000–$380,000 townhome range. Our guide to Rochester NY first-time home buyer programs and grants covers available assistance that can meaningfully reduce upfront costs for this segment.

HOA Fees & Debt-to-Income

Lenders include HOA fees in your monthly debt obligations when calculating your debt-to-income (DTI) ratio. A $350/month HOA fee on a $350,000 townhome meaningfully affects how much home you can qualify for — it's the equivalent of adding an additional ~$60,000–$70,000 of purchase price from a DTI perspective. Factor this in early: compare townhomes with different HOA fee structures alongside their purchase prices to understand the true financing impact of each option.

Smart Strategies for Buying a Townhome in Greater Rochester NY

Townhome buyers who understand the market and come prepared consistently get better outcomes — better unit positions, better HOA situations, and more favorable pricing — than those who approach the purchase without preparation.

Prioritize End Units If Privacy and Light Matter to You

End units sell first, stay on the market the shortest time, and command the strongest resale prices in virtually every Rochester townhome community. If you're sensitive to noise from shared walls, or if natural light is a priority, the premium for an end unit is almost always worth it. Set up alerts specifically for end-unit availability in your target communities — they become available less frequently than interior units and require faster decision-making when they do.

Evaluate the HOA Before You Evaluate the Unit

The physical condition of a townhome unit is something you can see and fix. The financial health and management quality of the HOA is something you inherit and live with. A beautifully updated unit in a poorly-managed, underfunded community is a liability — special assessments, deferred maintenance on shared systems, and contentious board governance will affect your ownership experience regardless of how nice your interior is. Request HOA documents early — before your inspection if possible — and review the financials as carefully as you review the home itself.

Understand the Rules Before You Fall in Love

HOA rules and restrictions can significantly affect whether a given community is right for your lifestyle. Pet policies (breed and weight restrictions are common), rental policies (many communities restrict or prohibit short-term and long-term rentals), parking rules (guest parking, commercial vehicle restrictions), and exterior modification policies (no flags, no holiday lights outside certain dates, no satellite dishes visible from the street) are all governed by the bylaws and rules and regulations. Read them before you make an offer — not after you've already committed emotionally and financially.

Work with an Agent Experienced in HOA Properties

Townhome transactions have specific due diligence requirements — HOA document review timelines, financing eligibility confirmation, insurance coordination, and contract contingency language — that go beyond standard residential purchase procedures. An agent who regularly works with townhome and attached housing can guide you through these requirements in sequence without missing steps that could create problems post-closing. Interviewing your buyer's agent specifically about their townhome and HOA transaction experience is a worthwhile early step.

Frequently Asked Questions: Townhomes in Greater Rochester NY

What is the difference between a townhome and a condo in Rochester?

The most practical differences are layout, ownership structure, and HOA responsibility. Townhomes are typically multi-level with private entries and attached garages; condos are often single-floor units in larger buildings. Ownership-wise, townhome owners typically own their unit and the land beneath; condo owners own airspace only. HOA coverage differs: condo HOAs typically insure the building shell under a master policy; townhome HOA coverage is more variable. For financing, condominiums face additional lender eligibility requirements (warrantability) that most townhome communities in planned unit developments do not. Always confirm the legal structure — some physically townhome-like properties are legally registered as condominiums.

How competitive is the Rochester townhome market?

Competition is strong — particularly for end units, updated interiors, and townhomes with garages in desirable communities like Pittsford, Victor, and Fairport. Well-priced townhomes in the $250,000–$400,000 range frequently receive multiple offers and sell above list price. The 2026 Greater Rochester housing market outlook provides current context on pricing and competition levels across the townhome segment and broader market.

Do townhomes in Rochester allow pets?

Most Rochester-area townhome communities allow pets, but with restrictions that vary significantly — weight limits (commonly 25–50 lbs), breed restrictions (particularly for dogs classified as aggressive breeds), number of pets per unit, and leash and common area rules. Some communities have no restrictions whatsoever; a few prohibit dogs entirely. Always request and read the current pet policy from the HOA documents before making an offer if pets are part of your household. Pet rules in the CC&Rs are legally binding and the seller's verbal assurances are not a substitute for reviewing the actual documents.

Do townhomes hold their value in Rochester?

Well-maintained townhomes in desirable Rochester communities have a strong track record of value appreciation — particularly end units in Pittsford, Victor, Fairport, and Penfield. The key factors that determine long-term resale value are community management quality, HOA financial health, location, and unit type (end units consistently outperform interior units). Understanding how properties are appraised and assessed in Rochester helps set realistic expectations for how your townhome's value will be evaluated at resale — particularly since HOA fees and shared ownership structures affect the appraiser's comparable sales analysis.

Can I rent out my Rochester townhome?

It depends entirely on the HOA's governing documents. Many Rochester townhome communities restrict or prohibit short-term rentals (Airbnb/VRBO) outright, and some limit or prohibit long-term rentals as well — often through rental caps (e.g., no more than 20% of units may be rented at any time) or minimum lease term requirements. If rental potential is part of your financial plan for the property, confirm the rental policy in the CC&Rs before making an offer — not after. Financing lenders also look at rental concentration in a community when determining warrantability, so high investor ownership can affect future buyers' financing options and therefore your eventual resale.

Ready to find your townhome in Greater Rochester?

Tell us your price range, preferred communities, garage and pet requirements, and HOA preferences — we'll send matching listings plus instant alerts for new and coming-soon townhomes.

Contact Hiscock Homes

Equal Housing Opportunity. All real estate information is deemed reliable but not guaranteed. HOA fees, coverage, rules, and financing eligibility vary by community and change over time. Always review current HOA documents and consult qualified legal and financial professionals prior to purchase. Contact Hiscock Homes at REMAX Realty Group for current availability and community-specific information.

Get your curated townhomes for sale list!

Describe the Home You're Looking For

By proceeding, you consent to receive calls, texts and voicemails at the number you provided (may be recorded and may be autodialed and use prerecorded and artificial voices), and email, from Hiscock Homes at REMAX Realty Group about your inquiry and other home-related matters. Msg/data rates may apply. This consent applies even if you are on a do not call list and is not a condition of any purchase.
What's your home worth?
Have a top local Realtor give you a FREE Comparative Market Analysis