Claremont, New Hampshire is a small New England city, nestled in the foothills of Mount Ascutney, along the Connecticut River and just off Interstate 91. Claremont offers residents a great mix of small-town freedom and solitude and a lively downtown scene.
Claremont is a great place for all kinds of outdoor enthusiasts.
Mountain bikers, off-road riders, boaters, hikers, fishermen and hunters, all call Claremont home.
The City has an awesome parks and recreation system, which features a community center, intramural leagues for children and adults, and the Arrowhead Recreational Area, which offers affordable skiing, snow tubing and hiking trails.
Claremont’s City Center is home to restaurants and bars, shops, arts and cultural facilities
The Washington Street commercial area supplements the downtown marketplace, with larger department stores, grocery stores, and chain restaurants. For a more extensive list of local attractions, check out our Things To Do page.
Starting, expanding or bringing a new business to Claremont
Many of Claremont’s largest and most successful companies work in advanced manufacturing, wood or metal-based manufacturing, or home building. Almost a quarter of the region’s workforce is engaged in production, construction, engineering, or a related field.
Claremont is a great place to start a new career or advance an existing one.
Machinists, welders, and people with a background in the trades won't have any trouble finding a high-quality job with the opportunity for advancement.
Over the past ten years, Claremont has seen significant growth in the fields of information technology and mortgage and banking services. New companies, moving to Claremont or expanding in the city, have opened up new career pathways in IT, sales, account management, and data processing.
CLAREMONT IS HOME TO A BROAD RANGE OF INDUSTRIES.
Businesses large and small thrive in Claremont.
Explore opportunities in IT, high tech engineering, hospitality or start your own business!
Claremont features a robust Parks system offering fun in every season!
From mountain biking and skateboarding to skiing and tubing and everything in here for you. Interested in taking a fitness class at the Community Center or registering your kids for youth sports league? Visit the Parks and Recreation page to find out how.
Claremont's City Center is home to a growing arts district.
Anchored by the majestic Claremont Opera House, built in 1897, Claremont has something for everyone. Request a tour of the Claremont MakerSpace experience this incredible mill building turned innovation hub, full of woodworkers, quilters, jewelers, and so much more. Community Theater is alive and well in Amplified Arts' Streetside Arts location on as well as productions by the community favorite Off Broad Street Players.
Vision Government Solutions has released the preliminary values for the 2023 Claremont city-wide revaluation. Letters have been mailed with the preliminary values to each property owner. DO NOT use last year’s tax rate to calculate estimated taxes for 2023. As most property values have increased, there will be a decrease in the tax rate. We will not have the 2023 tax rate until later this fall when it is issued by the Department of Revenue Administration.
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This tax year (2023), the City of Claremont contracted with Vision Government Solutions to complete a full revaluation of all properties in compliance with RSA 75:8-a. Besides the constitutional and statutory requirements, there are many beneficial aspects to completing a revaluation. The nature of the value of real estate is that values change. Basic fairness in property taxation requires that everyone pays based on the market value of their property, and the revaluation resets all property to market value.
Every year the City of Claremont Assessing Department monitors qualified sales and the real estate market in general in Claremont. For the final 2022 tax year, Claremont’s median ratio was calculated to be 56.8% of market value. This means that sale prices in 2022 were approximately 76% higher than pre-revaluation assessments. The New Hampshire Department of Revenue Administration requires municipalities to be within 90-110% of market value during a revaluation.
Vision Government Solutions will review qualified sales to adjust metrics in the Computer Aided Mass Appraisal (CAMA) System to better reflect market value based on data points already collected throughout the city. These adjustments will create a mass appraisal of all property that more accurately reflects the market values of all properties across the city.
The new tax rate will be established by the Department of Revenue Administration later this year. An increase in property value does not necessarily mean an increase in your property tax bill. DO NOT USE the current tax rate to estimate your taxes. An increase in town-wide value generally results in a decrease to the tax rate.
The revaluation does not change the normal right to appeal through abatements following the final tax bill or further appeal processes following a response to an abatement. All abatement procedures remain the same and must be filed following the final 2023 tax bill by March 1, 2024.
Below are some studies and information that may be helpful in conceptualizing and understanding aspects of the revaluation: