
Tracking 3,523 properties across Easton, Connecticut — a community where the median home dates to 1968 and the oldest to 1714. Every parcel mapped with building characteristics, environmental exposure, hazard risk, and ownership history assembled from 140+ sources.
Easton is a small, affluent, rural town between Bridgeport and Monroe, with a housing stock of large single-family homes on wooded lots. The town has no commercial center and a deliberate low-density character maintained through zoning.
For property professionals, Easton is a high-value residential market where lot size, privacy, and rural setting drive assessments despite the town's proximity to the urban Bridgeport area.
FEMA flood zones, fire protection grades, radon — parcel by parcel
294 properties (8%) are in FEMA Special Flood Hazard Areas, where flood insurance is required for federally-backed mortgages.
Fire protection grades reflect proximity to fire stations and hydrant infrastructure. Grade affects insurance pricing in every New England state.
3,523 properties · Median year built 1968 · Avg 2,679 sf
Greater Bridgeport · Connecticut
Easton covers 27.4 square miles in Greater Bridgeport, Connecticut. The median assessed property value is $20K.
Single-family homes account for 3,156 of Easton's 3,523 properties. About 0% of properties are owner-occupied.
Assessed values range widely — the middle 50% of properties fall between $3K and $40K. For professionals working in this market, the value spread tells you a lot about what you'll encounter door to door.
Most properties rely on private septic systems, and 42% have public water service. Electric service is provided by UNITED ILLUMINATING CO. 1,253 properties have identified commercial activity — restaurants, retail, professional offices, and services that give Easton its character.
Easton's fire protection grade distribution (136 Grade B, 1,323 Grade C) directly affects premium calculation. Parcel-level hazard data provides the granularity that ZIP-level aggregation misses.
Insurance solutionsEaston's 7 property types, spanning construction from 1714 to present, require local market knowledge for accurate comparable selection and valuation. NEP assembles building characteristics, environmental exposure, and condition signals into a single property profile.
Real estate solutionsCollateral assessment requires flood zone verification, environmental screening, and ownership chain validation. 8% of Easton properties are in SFHAs where flood insurance is a federal lending requirement. NEP provides property-level compliance data from public records.
Lending solutionsUnderstanding a property's construction era, environmental exposure, and building characteristics before arriving on site transforms inspection from discovery to verification.
Inspection solutions3,523 Easton properties — each with risk profiles, building data, permit history, and ownership analysis from 140+ sources. Open any property and see the full picture.

Source: NE Provenance, “Professional Property Intelligence for New England,” neprovenance.com/insights/town/easton-ct. For references or attribution, please link back to this page or neprovenance.com. Thank you, we appreciate it.