Moving to Stonington, CT
150 min to Grand Central. The relocation breakdown — schools, mortgage, mill rate, neighborhoods, and the honest trade-offs.
Most people moving to Stonington are coming from NYC or its suburbs. The trade is consistent: more space, better schools, lower per-square-foot housing cost, in exchange for needing a car, paying higher property taxes, and accepting a quieter weekly pace.
We've run this move dozens of times for clients leaving Brooklyn, Manhattan, and Westchester. The playbook is similar — get pre-approved with a CT-savvy lender, pick a school zone before a house, get pre-MLS access (inventory moves fast in Stonington), and have your CT registration / license / school enrollment lined up before close.
Stonington at a glance
$495,000
Median Home
21.80
Mill Rate
B+
Schools
150 min
NYC Commute
A Stonington relocation timeline
Weeks 1–2
Get pre-approved with a CT-savvy lender. Order your CT credit pull. Decide on rent-vs-buy timing — most NYC transplants buy directly, skipping a CT rental.
Weeks 3–6
Tour Stonington in person across 2–3 weekends. See homes across different school zones / commute orientations. Get pre-MLS list from Nomade.
Weeks 6–10
Make an offer, negotiate, schedule inspections. CT closing is 45–60 days from contract on a financed deal.
Weeks 10–12
Close. Schedule moving. Set up CT car registration, driver's license transfer (within 30 days), and school enrollment.
Stonington neighborhoods for newcomers
Browse Stonington by property type
Moving to Stonington: what people ask
How do I move to Stonington, CT in 2026?
Most people moving to Stonington are coming from NYC, Westchester, or out of state. Steps: (1) get pre-approved with a lender that knows CT, (2) pick a neighborhood / school zone fit, (3) work with a local broker on pre-MLS access (inventory in Stonington moves fast), (4) close, then handle CT car registration, license, and school enrollment within 30 days. Total runway from search to move-in is usually 60–90 days.
What's the commute from Stonington to NYC?
150 min to Grand Central via Metro-North. Local trains add roughly 10–15 minutes. Off-peak driving is similar but Metro-North is the dominant pattern. If you're moving from Manhattan or Brooklyn for the commute, Stonington is a real option.
What does it cost to move to Stonington?
Home prices in Stonington run around $495,000 at the median. Property tax: 21.80 mills × 70% of assessed value ÷ 1,000. Compared to NYC: housing cost per square foot is meaningfully lower but property taxes are higher. Net of NYC rent + state/city tax, most movers find Stonington cheaper monthly — but the up-front buy is the gating cost.
What's the best neighborhood in Stonington for someone moving from NYC?
Stonington has well-defined sub-areas. The most NYC-transplant-friendly tend to be: Stonington Borough. Each has a different vibe — walkability, school zone, train proximity — see the neighborhood pages for full breakdowns.
Are the schools in Stonington good for kids moving from NYC?
Stonington schools rate B+. NYC families moving in usually find Stonington schools comparable to top NYC public/private options — sometimes better for STEM and athletics, sometimes thinner on arts. Top schools include Stonington High School.
What should I know before moving to Stonington from NYC?
A few honest things: (1) You'll need a car, even if you've never owned one. (2) Property taxes are real — budget them into your monthly the way you'd budget rent. (3) The social scene is different — less spontaneous, more planned. (4) Winter is colder and longer than NYC. (5) The trade is: more space, better schools, slower pace.
Planning your Stonington move?
Get pre-MLS access, a relocation playbook for Stonington, and a Nomade agent who's actually moved NYC families to CT before.
Talk to Nomade