
Tracking 5,960 properties across Milford, New Hampshire — a community where the median home dates to 1985 and the oldest to 1700. Every parcel mapped with building characteristics, environmental exposure, hazard risk, and ownership history assembled from 140+ sources.
Milford is a suburban town along the Souhegan River, with a well-defined downtown — the town oval, an unusual traffic pattern, is locally famous — and residential neighborhoods that have grown as the Nashua area has expanded. The housing stock mixes older village homes with suburban development.
For property professionals, Milford is a moderate suburban market with a walkable downtown, river flood considerations, and a housing stock spanning multiple construction eras.
FEMA flood zones, fire protection grades, radon — parcel by parcel
299 properties (5%) 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.
5,960 properties · Median year built 1985 · Avg 2,342 sf
Recorded transactions from Hillsborough County Registry of Deeds
NE Provenance tracks recorded deeds, mortgages, and liens for 64% of Milford properties. Ownership intelligence includes transaction history, entity detection, portfolio identification, and lien analysis — assembled from public registry records into a single property-level profile.
Hillsborough County · New Hampshire
Milford covers 25.4 square miles in Hillsborough County, New Hampshire. The median assessed property value is $310K.
Single-family homes account for 3,715 of Milford's 5,960 properties, with 864 condominiums and 325 multi-family buildings. There are 182 commercial properties and 301 parcels of vacant land. About 69% of properties are owner-occupied, and 3% are owned by someone out of state.
Assessed values range widely — the middle 50% of properties fall between $233K and $387K, with the highest assessed property at $31.8M. For professionals working in this market, the value spread tells you a lot about what you'll encounter door to door.
36% of properties are on municipal sewer, with the remainder on private septic systems, and 55% have public water service. Electric service is provided by PUBLIC SERVICE CO OF NH. 516 properties have identified commercial activity — restaurants, retail, professional offices, and services that give Milford its character.
Milford's fire protection grade distribution (524 Grade A, 1,320 Grade B) directly affects premium calculation. Parcel-level hazard data provides the granularity that ZIP-level aggregation misses.
Insurance solutionsMilford's 10 property types, spanning construction from 1700 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. 5% of Milford 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 solutions5,960 Milford 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/milford-nh. For references or attribution, please link back to this page or neprovenance.com. Thank you, we appreciate it.