Market Reports

Manhattan Rents Hit All-Time High as Sales Prices Drop

Image of January 2019 Market Reports

The rental market remained hot this January as the weakening home sales market motivated many would-be buyers to rent instead. While strong demand pushed up rents everywhere except for along the L train, the StreetEasy Manhattan Rent Index[i] reached a new high for the month of January and increased at the fastest pace in the city’s most expensive neighborhoods — particularly in Downtown Manhattan[ii] and northwest Brooklyn[iii], where rents rose by 2.4 percent and 3.5 percent, reaching $3,724 and $3,058, respectively.

Manhattan rent growth eclipsed Brooklyn and Queens again in January, which before late last year, which has not occurred since 2012. Manhattan rents rose to $3,204 — an annual increase of 2.6 percent, and the fastest annual pace since early 2016. Along with rising rents, rental concessions[iv] continued to fall across the city compared to the year before, deviating from the seasonal trend of discounts rising in the cooler months. In Manhattan, the share of rentals advertising concessions dropped at the fastest annual pace since 2010 – down by 8.6 percentage points annually to 13.2 percent.

“Manhattan home prices have reached lows we haven’t seen since 2015, and inventory levels are at historic highs, leading many to believe that now may be the time to buy. But with a median price above $1 million, purchasing a home in Manhattan is still too expensive for many in this market,” says StreetEasy Economic Data Analyst Nancy Wu. “Many would-be buyers are opting for the flexibility of renting in some of the most expensive areas of the city — which in turn is creating an unusually competitive winter rental season.”

See below for additional sales and rental market trends across Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens.

January 2019 Key Findings — Manhattan

January 2019 Key Findings — Brooklyn

January 2019 Key Findings — Queens

View the complete StreetEasy Market Reports for Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens with additional neighborhood data and graphics. See definitions of StreetEasy’s metrics and monthly data from each report.

[i] The StreetEasy Price Indices track changes in resale prices of condo, co-op, and townhouse units. Each index uses a repeat-sales method of comparing the sales prices of the same properties since January 1995 in Manhattan and January 2007 in Brooklyn and Queens. Given this methodology, each index accurately captures the change in home prices by controlling for the varying composition of homes sold in a given month. Levels of the StreetEasy Price Indices reflect average values of homes on the market. Data on the sale of homes is sourced from the New York City Department of Finance. Full methodology here.

[ii] The Upper Manhattan submarket includes Hudson Heights, Hamilton Heights, Washington Heights, Inwood, Fort George, West Harlem, Central Harlem, East Harlem, Manhattanville, South Harlem and Marble Hill.

[iii] The North Brooklyn submarket includes Greenpoint, Williamsburg and East Williamsburg.

[iv] The South Brooklyn submarket includes Sunset Park, Bay Ridge, Dyker Heights, Bensonhurst, Bath Beach, Gravesend, Borough Park, Ocean Parkway, Kensington, Coney Island, Brighton Beach, Ditmas Park, Seagate, Flatbush, Midwood, Sheepshead Bay, Manhattan Beach, East Flatbush, Canarsie, Flatlands, Marine Park, Mill Basin, Bergen Beach, Old Mill Basin, Greenwood and Gerritsen Beach.

[v] The Northwest Queens submarket includes Astoria, Long Island City, Sunnyside and Ditmars-Steinway.

[vi] The Central Queens submarket includes Woodside, Jackson Heights, East Elmhurst, North Corona, Elmhurst, Corona, Maspeth, Middle Village, Ridgewood, Glendale, Rego Park and Forest Hills.


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