Truro

Population: ~2,100 Β· Open Town Meeting Β· 3 Villages

Truro Village Sign

Highland Light (Cape Cod Light)

Truro Beach
DID YOU KNOW
Highland Light in Truro is the oldest and tallest lighthouse on Cape Cod, first established in 1797.

~2,100year-round residents β€” one of the smallest Cape towns
70%of Truro's land is protected open space or National Seashore
1620Pilgrims first landed in Truro before Plymouth
$20M+annual budget β€” every Town Meeting vote carries outsized weight

Villages of Truro

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Truro Weather — 3-Day Forecast
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 ·  Source: National Weather Service

Welcome to Truro

Truro is one of the smallest and most rural towns on Cape Cod, tucked between Wellfleet and Provincetown on the narrow Outer Cape. With barely 2,100 year-round residents, this is a community where solitude, natural beauty, and fierce self-governance define daily life. Highland Light, Cape Cod's oldest lighthouse, stands guard over dramatic cliffs and sweeping ocean views. Much of Truro falls within the Cape Cod National Seashore, making it one of the most protected and least developed towns in the region. The town operates under Open Town Meeting β€” in a place this small, every vote at Town Meeting truly counts.

Truro was incorporated in 1709, making it one of the earliest European settlements on the Outer Cape. The town is named after Truro in Cornwall, England, and its early economy revolved around whaling, fishing, and salt-making. By the mid-1800s, Truro's population had declined sharply as the whaling industry collapsed, and the town became one of the quietest corners of Cape Cod. That solitude attracted artists and writers throughout the twentieth century β€” Edward Hopper spent decades painting the Truro landscape, and the town still draws creative residents who value its open spaces and unhurried pace. Highland Light (Cape Cod Light), the oldest lighthouse on Cape Cod, was built in Truro in 1797 and famously moved back from the eroding cliff edge in 1996. Much of Truro lies within the Cape Cod National Seashore, which limits development and preserves vast stretches of dunes, marshes, and ocean beach. With a year-round population of about 2,000 that swells past 10,000 in summer, Truro operates under an Open Town Meeting government. The five-member Select Board manages town affairs, and the town is part of the Nauset Regional School District with Eastham, Brewster, Orleans, and Wellfleet.

Key Officials (2025)

ROLE NAME NOTES
Town Manager Darrin Tangeman Chief executive and administrative officer
Select Board 5 Elected Members
Kristen Reed (Chair)
Susan Areson
Robert Weinstein
Stephanie Rein
John Lundborn
Full roster & contact info →
Planning Board Appointed board Zoning, land use, development review
School Committee Elected Nauset Regional School District representative
Police Chief Jamie Calise Truro Police Dept. — (508) 487-8730
Fire Chief Timothy Collins Truro Fire Dept. — (508) 487-7548

~2,100
year-round residents
70%
of land within Cape Cod National Seashore
1709
year incorporated
4x
summer population surge

Active Issues (2024–2025)

Housing & Short-Term Rentals

Year-Round Housing Crisis & Short-Term Rental Regulation

Truro's tiny year-round population makes the housing crisis especially acute. Vacation rentals dominate the real estate market, and the town has been among the most aggressive on Cape Cod in regulating them. A short-term rental bylaw adopted at Town Meeting requires registration and limits the number of rental days, aiming to preserve year-round housing stock.

Why it matters: Without intervention, Truro risks becoming a seasonal-only community. The loss of year-round residents affects schools, emergency services, local businesses, and the social fabric of the town. Every short-term rental that replaces a year-round home reduces the community’s ability to sustain itself.

Watch for: Annual Town Meeting votes on rental regulation amendments, Affordable Housing Trust funding proposals, and any 40B comprehensive permit applications before the Zoning Board of Appeals.

Infrastructure

Public Water System Development

Truro is working to establish a public water system after decades of relying on private wells. The Truro Water Resources Committee has been studying options for a municipal water supply, driven by concerns about well water quality, PFAS contamination from Joint Base Cape Cod, and the long-term reliability of individual wells as the aquifer faces increased demands.

Why it matters: This is one of the most consequential infrastructure decisions Truro will make in a generation. A public water system represents a massive capital investment for a community of 2,100 year-round residents. How the costs are structured — bonding, betterment assessments, user fees — will directly affect property tax bills for decades.

Resident impact: Homeowners currently on private wells will face connection costs and ongoing fees. The timeline for construction, phasing by neighborhood, and the final cost per household are all under active discussion.

Source: Truro Water Resources Committee

Environment & Climate

Coastal Erosion & Climate Vulnerability

The narrow Outer Cape is particularly vulnerable to erosion and sea-level rise, and Truro sits at the sharp end of the problem. The town’s ocean-facing bluffs are eroding at measurable rates, threatening homes, roads, and critical infrastructure. Highland Light (Cape Cod Light) was relocated 450 feet inland in 1996 to save it from the retreating bluff edge — a dramatic illustration of what’s at stake.

Why it matters: Climate adaptation isn’t theoretical on the Outer Cape — it’s happening now. Property owners along the coast face declining property values and eventual loss of structures. The town must decide which infrastructure to protect, which to relocate, and how to pay for it. These decisions play out at Select Board meetings, Conservation Commission hearings, and Town Meeting.

Watch for: Coastal resilience planning updates, Conservation Commission decisions on erosion-zone properties, and any state or federal grant applications for climate adaptation projects.

Education & Finance

Nauset Regional School District — Costs & Enrollment

As a member of the Nauset Regional School District (with Eastham, Brewster, Orleans, and Wellfleet), Truro taxpayers fund a share of the regional school budget based on enrollment. With Truro’s year-round population shrinking and student enrollment declining, the per-pupil cost allocated to the town is a growing concern at Town Meeting.

Why it matters: School assessments are one of the largest single items in Truro’s annual budget. As enrollment drops, the fixed costs of running schools don’t decrease proportionally — meaning each remaining student costs the district more. Truro voters have a direct say in the school budget at the annual Nauset Regional School District meeting.

Source: Nauset Regional School District

Land Use & Federal Relations

Cape Cod National Seashore — Land Use & Access

Roughly 70% of Truro’s land area falls within the Cape Cod National Seashore, making federal land management decisions a daily reality for residents. Beach access, parking, wildlife management, and development constraints are all shaped by National Park Service policies that residents cannot vote on directly.

Why it matters: The National Seashore protects Truro’s extraordinary natural landscape, but it also limits the town’s ability to grow, build affordable housing, or generate tax revenue from developable land. The tension between preservation and community needs is a defining feature of Truro politics.

Watch for: NPS management plan updates, beach parking and access policy changes, and any proposed changes to Seashore boundaries or permitted uses that affect residential properties.

Issue Timeline

Date Event / Development
1797 Highland Light (Cape Cod Light) first built β€” oldest lighthouse on Cape Cod
1961 Cape Cod National Seashore established, covering large portions of Truro
1996 Highland Light moved 450 feet from eroding cliff edge in landmark preservation effort
2020 Short-term rental regulation debate intensifies as housing costs soar
2022 Town approves Cloverleaf affordable housing project after years of debate
2023 Wastewater planning advances with Cape Cod Commission technical support
2024 Nauset school funding formula and enrollment redistribution under review
2025 Town explores community septic and nature-based wastewater solutions

Local Landmarks

Highland Light, Truro

Highland Light (Cape Cod Light) in Truro — Photo: Wikimedia Commons

Highland Light, also known as Cape Cod Light, is the oldest and tallest lighthouse on Cape Cod, first lit in 1797. The current tower, built in 1857, stands 66 feet tall and was famously moved 450 feet back from the eroding cliff edge in 1996 to preserve this National Historic Landmark for future generations.

Truro's dramatic landscape is defined by rolling dunes, steep ocean bluffs, and the vast expanse of the Cape Cod National Seashore, which encompasses most of the town's coastline. The Highland House Museum, the Payomet Performing Arts Center, and the Truro Vineyards are popular cultural destinations that reflect the town's artistic spirit.

Town Resources

How to Stay Involved

Meetings & Agendas

Truro is small enough that you probably know your Select Board members by name. That's the beauty of local government at this scale β€” and the reason you have no excuse not to show up.

  • Select Board: Meets regularly at Town Hall, 24 Town Hall Road. Check the Select Board page for meeting dates.
  • Annual Town Meeting: Typically held in April at Truro Central School.
Coming Soon

Get notified before Truro's Select Board meets, when Town Meeting is scheduled, and when bills affecting the Outer Cape are filed on Beacon Hill β€” by email or SMS, your choice. Join the waiting list

Upcoming Meetings

March 2026 β€” Key Dates
Mar 10Select Board Meeting, 5:00 PM β€” Town Hall
Mar 24Select Board Meeting, 5:00 PM β€” Town Hall
April – May 2026
Apr 14Select Board Meeting, 5:00 PM β€” Town Hall
Apr 27Annual Town Meeting β€” Truro Community Center, 7 Standish Way. All registered voters may attend, debate, and vote.
Select Board typically meets the 2nd and 4th Tuesday at 5:00 PM. All meetings are open to the public. Full meeting calendar β†’
Watch Recorded Meetings
Lower Cape TV β€” Watch past meetings online.

Quick Links