Diamond Point is a hamlet on the western shore of Lake George in Warren County, New York, and the directory's category mix here makes the town's identity obvious in a single read. Fifty-two listings sit across three ZIP codes, and the heaviest categories are hotels at four, vacation rentals at three, and campgrounds at two. The rest of the top tier carries two florists, two delicatessens, a gym, a library, and a pest-control operator.
This is a lakefront resort community, not a year-round service hub, and the directory reflects that. The four hotels plus three vacation rentals plus two campgrounds in a fifty-two-business listing means roughly one in every six businesses is overnight-lodging adjacent. That ratio is unusual outside of true resort destinations, and it tracks with Diamond Point's long history as part of the Lake George tourism corridor running north from the village.
The two-delicatessen count is the kind of detail that signals a summer tourism economy. Lakefront delis serve a different mix of customers than year-round small-town delis. The peak business window is roughly Memorial Day through Columbus Day, and pricing during that window runs noticeably above off-season levels. The two florists likely serve a wedding market that draws on the lakefront venues in and around the hamlet, which is a recurring use case in this stretch of Lake George.
Pest control as a listed category in a town this size points to the lakefront residential market. Seasonal homes and rental properties on the lake generate steady demand for tick treatment, carpenter-ant work, and rodent exclusion. Operators in this corridor often handle properties from Bolton Landing south through Diamond Point and into Lake George village.
For hiring trades work in Warren County, New York licenses electricians and plumbers through individual county and municipal jurisdictions rather than at the state level. The Warren County Code Enforcement Office is the typical verification source for residential contractor work in the area. License and permit status is verifiable through the county before any contract.
Seasonality drives almost every operator on this listing. Many businesses in the directory either close or scale back from November through April. For non-emergency work in the trades, scheduling in late winter or early spring is often easier than during the summer window when contractors are pulled toward the more lucrative resort-property work. The directory does not yet have an average rating for Diamond Point businesses, and lakefront hamlets often run lower review density than year-round towns of similar size.