*** No USDA eligible properties were found in Rochester ***
To find a home that may be eligible for a USDA loan, have a look at the neighboring city Ogden, NY. This city falls within a zone of USDA loan eligibility.

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Rochester
, New York in Monroe County

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Red areas indicate USDA defined loan exclusion zones.

There are currently no properties eligible for USDA loans in Rochester.

Please try searching another, possibly more rural and populated region. Other cities in Monroe county include:

Adams Basin,   Arnett,   Bailey,   Belcoda,   Benedict Beach,   Beulah,   Braddock Heights,   Brighton,   Brockport,   Brookdale,   Bushnell Basin,   Cedar Swamp,   Chili,   Chili Center,   Churchville,   Clarkson,   Coldwater,   Crescent Beach,   Davison Beach,   East Penfield,   East Rochester,   Egypt,   Elmgrove,   Fairport,   Forest Lawn,   Garbutt,   Garland,   Gates,   Gates Center,   German Village,   Glen Edith,   Glen Haven,   Golah,   Grand View Heights,   Greece,   Hamlin,   Henrietta,   Hilton,   Hinkleyville,   Honeoye Falls,   Irondequoit,   Island Cottage Beach,   Kendall Mills,   Lighthouse Beach,   Manitou Beach,   Martin,   Meadow Wood,   Mendon,   Mendon Center,   Mile of Woods,   Mortimer,   Morton,   Mount Read,   Mumford,   North Chili,   North Gates,   North Greece,   North Hamlin,   North Rush,   Ogden,   Ogden Center,   Oklahoma Beach,   Onteo Beach,   Otis,   Parma,   Parma Center,   Payne Beach,   Penfield,   Penfield Center,   Perinton,   Pittsford,   Ridgeland,   Riga,   Rigney Bluff,   Rock Beach,   Roseland,   Rush,   Sandy Harbour Beach,   Scottsville,   Sea Breeze,   Sibleyville,   South Chili,   South Greece,   Spencerport,   Sweden,   Sweden Center,   Town Pump,   Tressmar,   Troutburg,   Walker,   Wautoma Beach,   Webster,   West Chili,   West Greece,   West Henrietta,   West Rush,   West Sweden,   West Webster,   Westfall,   Wheatland,   Wheatland Center,   White City,   Whites,  

 

Or have a look at other New York counties including:

Albany,   Allegany,   Bronx,   Broome,   Cattaraugus,   Cayuga,   Chautauqua,   Chemung,   Chenango,   Clinton,   Columbia,   Cortland,   Delaware,   Dutchess,   Erie,   Essex,   Franklin,   Fulton,   Genesee,   Greene,   Hamilton,   Herkimer,   Jefferson,   Kings,   Lewis,   Livingston,   Madison,   Montgomery,   Nassau,   New York,   Niagara,   Oneida,   Onondaga,   Ontario,   Orange,   Orleans,   Oswego,   Otsego,   Putnam,   Queens,   Rensselaer,   Richmond,   Rockland,   Saint Lawrence,   Saratoga,   Schenectady,   Schoharie,   Schuyler,   Seneca,   Steuben,   Suffolk,   Sullivan,   Tioga,   Tompkins,   Ulster,   Warren,   Washington,   Wayne,   Westchester,   Wyoming,   Yates,  

Interested in fun facts and the history of Rochester, NY?
Then read on!

Rochester, New York played a significant role in the American Civil Rights Movement. One of the city's most notable residents was Frederick Douglass, a former slave who became a prominent abolitionist and civil rights leader. Douglass moved to Rochester in the 1840s and founded the abolitionist newspaper "The North Star."

In July 1852, Douglass gave one of his most famous speeches, "What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?", at Corinthian Hall in Rochester. In it, he condemned the hypocrisy of celebrating freedom and independence while denying those same rights to enslaved and oppressed individuals. The speech helped to fuel the anti-slavery movement and is still considered a powerful indictment of American racism and inequality.

Another historical anecdote of Rochester is that the city was a major center of the women's suffrage movement. In 1848, the first women's rights convention was held in nearby Seneca Falls, and many of the leaders of the suffrage movement, including Susan B. Anthony, lived in Rochester. The city hosted many suffrage rallies and campaigns, and in 1917, New York State granted women the right to vote.