Community guide · Glen Cove, Nassau County, NY
Living and Buying in Glen Cove, Long Island
Glen Cove is one of Nassau County's two cities — Long Beach is the other — with its own mayor, its own city council, and one school district covering the whole city, set on the North Shore between Hempstead Harbor and the Long Island Sound. Here is how the city is laid out, what the housing looks like, and how a purchase here runs.
Glen Cove at a glance
The structural facts that shape a Glen Cove purchase before any listing photo does — the city's status, its schools, its rail line, and who is on your side of the table.
1 of 2
Nassau's two cities: Glen Cove on the North Shore, Long Beach on the barrier island
1 district
The Glen Cove City School District covers the entire city
3 stations
LIRR Oyster Bay branch — Glen Cove, Glen Street, and Sea Cliff sit within the city line
Since 1996
Leatherman Homes has worked Nassau County from Rockville Centre
What Glen Cove is
Glen Cove sits on Nassau County's North Shore, on rising ground between Hempstead Harbor to the west and the Long Island Sound to the north. It is an incorporated city — one of two in the county, alongside Long Beach — and that legal status changes more than the name on the welcome sign. Most of Nassau is governed through its three towns of Hempstead, North Hempstead, and Oyster Bay. Glen Cove stands apart from all three: it elects its own mayor and city council under a strong-mayor form of government, runs its own city services, and operates one school district that covers every address in the city.
A century ago this stretch of shoreline was the heart of Long Island's Gold Coast. Families named Morgan and Pratt held estates here — the Pratt family alone owned roughly 1,100 acres around the city — and the footprint of that era survives in an unusual amount of public waterfront: Morgan Memorial Park on the water, the 204-acre Welwyn Preserve, and the 62-acre Garvies Point Museum and Preserve. What grew up around those estates is a working city of about 28,000 people (28,365 at the 2020 census) with a real downtown, a genuinely diverse population, and a housing stock that runs wider than nearly any of the villages around it.
The waterfront edge
The city's western and northern edges meet the water — Hempstead Harbor, Glen Cove Creek, and the Sound shoreline. This is where the estate-era parks and preserves sit, where the city's beaches are, and where the Garvies Point redevelopment has added a new condominium and rental district along the creek and the harbor.
Downtown and the residential streets
Inland, Glen Cove works like a small city: a walkable downtown, the Glen Street and Glen Cove LIRR stations, established co-op and condo buildings near the center, and neighborhoods of single-family houses fanning out toward the city line. Prices and home types shift noticeably from block to block, which rewards a buyer who tours widely.
The short answer
If you only read one section, read this one.
Glen Cove is a small North Shore city with its own government and one citywide school district, which makes it simpler to read than most of Nassau County. Its housing stock is among the widest on this part of the Shore: single-family houses on the residential streets, established co-op and condo buildings near downtown, and newer waterfront condominiums at Garvies Point on Hempstead Harbor. Three LIRR Oyster Bay branch stations sit within the city line.
The buyers it suits want water, parkland, and a range of home types and price points in one place. The real work of a purchase here is matching the ownership type — house, co-op, or condo — and the block to your budget before you tour, because each of the three runs on different financing, a different timeline, and a different approval process.
Quick facts
The reference points buyers ask about first, with the public sources to confirm them in the resources section below.
- County: Nassau County, New York — the North Shore
- Status: An incorporated city, one of two in Nassau alongside Long Beach
- Government: Its own mayor and city council; part of no town
- Population: 28,365 at the 2020 census
- Schools: Glen Cove City School District — one district, citywide
- Commute: LIRR Oyster Bay branch — Glen Cove, Glen Street, and Sea Cliff stations
- Waterfront: Hempstead Harbor, Glen Cove Creek, and the Long Island Sound
- Housing: Single-family houses, co-ops, condos, and new waterfront condominiums
Data last verified July 2026 against the public sources linked in Sources & references below. We keep medians, days-on-market, and appreciation figures off this page — those move weekly, and the live grid on the Glen Cove listings page is current in a way a written figure never stays.
The range of homes you will find
Glen Cove carries all three of Nassau's ownership types in real numbers, which is unusual on the North Shore. The type you choose sets the financing, the timeline, and whether a board has to approve you — so it is the first filter worth setting.
Single-family houses
The core of the city's stock — houses of many eras on the residential streets between downtown and the water, from modest homes near the center to larger properties toward the shoreline. These are conventional, deeded purchases.
Co-op apartments
Glen Cove has established co-op buildings, most within reach of downtown and the rail. A co-op purchase means buying shares in a corporation and passing a board-approval step, and the financing and timeline run differently from a house. Representation that has closed co-ops matters here.
Condominiums
Deeded units with less upkeep than a house and no board purchase approval. Alongside the city's older condo stock, the Garvies Point redevelopment has added new waterfront condominiums on Hempstead Harbor — a scale of new condo construction few Nassau communities can show.
Garvies Point — the waterfront district
The biggest change to Glen Cove's housing market in a generation is happening along Glen Cove Creek and Hempstead Harbor, and it is worth understanding before you search.
Garvies Point is a master development by RXR, built in partnership with the City of Glen Cove on the former industrial waterfront. The plan calls for over 1,000 new homes, new commercial and retail space, and 28 acres of public esplanade and parks along the water. As of mid-2026 the project is roughly halfway built: the Beacon condominiums and the Harbor Landing rental building are up along the water — roughly 550 homes — with RXR's Village Square rentals a short walk inland in downtown Glen Cove, and construction continues — The Arden, a 101-unit rental building, broke ground in early 2026 with first move-ins planned for 2027.
For a buyer this cuts two ways. It puts brand-new waterfront condominiums into a market whose condo stock had mostly been older buildings, with the esplanade, the preserve, and the harbor at the door. It also means parts of the district will remain an active construction zone for several more years, so walk the specific block and confirm the current phase before you commit — the city posts updates on its official Waterfront Project page, linked in the sources below.
The Glen Cove schools
Across most of Nassau County, school-district lines run block by block through the hamlets, and confirming the district is a major piece of any purchase. Glen Cove is simpler.
The Glen Cove City School District covers the whole city: four elementary schools, Robert M. Finley Middle School, and Glen Cove High School. If the home is in Glen Cove, you know the district — a clarity most Nassau buyers never get. District lines still deserve a check right at the city's edges, where a street can sit in a neighboring district, so we confirm the district on any specific house as a matter of course. The district's own site and the New York State Education Department publish enrollment and performance data if you want a third-party read.
Parks, preserves, and the waterfront
Glen Cove's estate-era history left it with a remarkable amount of public green space and shoreline for a city of its size — and day to day, that is a large part of what you are buying.
Morgan Memorial Park sits on the water on land given by J.P. Morgan Jr. in memory of his wife, with lawns running down to the beach. The Welwyn Preserve covers 204 acres of the former Harold I. Pratt estate — wooded trails, ponds, a salt marsh, and a stretch of Long Island Sound shoreline — and the Pratt mansion at its center now houses the Holocaust Memorial and Tolerance Center of Nassau County. The Garvies Point Museum and Preserve adds another 62 acres on the harbor, with a museum devoted to Long Island geology and Native American archaeology. The city also maintains its own beaches and parks, listed on the city website.
Add the new public esplanade taking shape along the Garvies Point waterfront and the practical picture is this: from most blocks in Glen Cove, open water or preserved woodland is a few minutes away.
My take on buying in Glen Cove
An honest read on the tradeoffs, from a brokerage that works the whole county.
What works in your favor
- Real range in one place — houses, co-ops, and condos across a wide band of price points, which is rare on the North Shore.
- One citywide school district removes the block-by-block district puzzle that complicates most Nassau searches.
- Estate-era parks, city beaches, and the new harbor esplanade put genuine waterfront into everyday life.
- Three LIRR stations inside the city line give most blocks a walkable or short-drive rail option.
What to go in clear-eyed about
- The Oyster Bay branch is the quieter end of the LIRR — take a timed test ride at your actual commute hour before you decide.
- House, co-op, and condo each run on different financing, timelines, and approvals; pick the type before you tour.
- Blocks near the harbor and the creek deserve a FEMA flood-map read — we pull the zone on any home near the water.
- Garvies Point is still building out; confirm the phase around any unit you are considering.
How Leatherman Homes works a Glen Cove purchase
Leatherman Homes is a boutique brokerage that has worked Nassau County from Rockville Centre since 1996 — twenty-six licensed associates, most running their own book, plus two small teams within the roster. Broker Kevin Leatherman brings 1,100-plus personal career transactions to how the firm prices and negotiates, and he is a Past President of the Long Island Board of REALTORS® and of MLSli and serves on the Board of Managers of OneKey® MLS — the systems that carry every listing on this page.
On a Glen Cove purchase that experience shows up in the checks that happen before an offer: which ownership type fits your financing, what a co-op board here will want to see, how the flood map reads on a block near the harbor, and what recent comparable sales say about the street. You work with a named associate who stays on the file to the close.
- Boutique brokerage, since 1996
- 1,100+ transactions
- Past President, LIBOR
- Past President, MLSli
- Board of Managers, OneKey® MLS
Meet the full roster on our associates page, or start with the Nassau County guide to see how Glen Cove compares across the county.
Glen Cove homes on the market now
We keep price figures off this guide on purpose — they go stale within weeks. The live grid is the honest answer.
The Glen Cove listings page pulls every active listing in the city from the MLS and refreshes daily — houses, co-ops, and condos in one grid, with one-tap filters for type, beds, and price. If you are weighing Glen Cove against the rest of the county, the same live view exists county-wide on the Nassau County listings page.
Glen Cove on the map
The landmarks that anchor a Glen Cove home search — open each in Google Maps to see how a block sits relative to the water, the stations, and the parks.
Glen Cove — common questions
The questions Glen Cove buyers ask us first, answered straight.
Is Glen Cove a city or a town?
Glen Cove is an incorporated city — one of only two in Nassau County, alongside Long Beach. It sits outside the county's three towns, elects its own mayor and city council, runs its own city services, and operates its own school district.
What school district serves Glen Cove homes?
The Glen Cove City School District covers the entire city — four elementary schools, Robert M. Finley Middle School, and Glen Cove High School. Homes right at the city's edges can sit in a neighboring district, so we confirm the district on any specific house.
How do you commute from Glen Cove to Manhattan?
Three LIRR Oyster Bay branch stations sit within the city line — Glen Cove, Glen Street, and Sea Cliff. Service levels on the branch differ from the busier South Shore lines, so check current schedules on the MTA site and take a test ride at your actual commute hour before you decide.
What kinds of homes are for sale in Glen Cove?
All three of Nassau's ownership types in real numbers: single-family houses on the residential streets, established co-op buildings near downtown and the rail, and condominiums that include the newer waterfront buildings at Garvies Point on Hempstead Harbor.
What is Garvies Point?
Garvies Point is a master development by RXR on Glen Cove's former industrial waterfront, along Glen Cove Creek and Hempstead Harbor — over 1,000 planned homes, including the Beacon condominiums and several rental buildings, plus 28 acres of public esplanade and parks. As of mid-2026 it is roughly halfway built and construction continues, so confirm the current phase around any unit you are considering.
Does Leatherman Homes work in Glen Cove?
Yes. Leatherman Homes has worked Nassau County from its Rockville Centre office since 1996, and broker Kevin Leatherman has 1,100-plus career transactions across houses, co-ops, and condos — the full mix Glen Cove trades in. A named associate handles your file from the first showing to the close.
Sources & references
The public records and agencies we use to confirm the facts on this page — and that you can check yourself before you buy.
- City of Glen Cove — official city site (government, departments, beaches and parks)
- City of Glen Cove — Waterfront Project (Garvies Point status and updates)
- Glen Cove City School District (schools, enrollment, calendars)
- MTA Long Island Rail Road (Oyster Bay branch schedules and fares)
- Nassau County, NY (assessment, records, county parks including Welwyn)
- FEMA Flood Map Service Center (flood zone and elevation lookups near the harbor)
- U.S. Census Bureau (population and housing data for Glen Cove city)
Explore Glen Cove and the county
Glen Cove's neighbors on the North Shore — Sea Cliff, Glen Head, and Locust Valley among them — each read differently. Start with the county guide to compare, or go straight to the live inventory.
Looking at Glen Cove?
See what is on the market today, or talk through the right block and the right ownership type with a brokerage that has worked Nassau County since 1996.
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