Geneva is a town in Ontario County, New York state in the United States near to the Canadian border. It is named after the city and canton of Geneva in Switzerland. It lies at the northern end of the Seneca Lake, in the Finger Lakes region, the largest producer of wine in New York State. It has a population of about 15000 people, and the principle industries are tourism, farming and light industry.

It was originally the site of the Seneca Native American village of Kanadasaga. The village was abandoned following its destruction by the punitive Sullivan Expedition of 1779, but resettled by Europeans around 1793 as a town developed by the Pulteney Association.

Elizabeth Blackwell, the first woman to become qualified as a medical doctor in the United States studied here, graduating from the medical school at what was then Geneva College in 1849.

Hobart and William Smith Colleges, the successor institution to Geneva College.

The New York State Agricultural Experiment Station of Cornell University's College of Agriculture and Life Sciences