Manhattan
Brooklyn
| Metric | Midtown | Midwood |
|---|---|---|
| Median Sale Price | $1,342,000 | $1,193,750 |
| Median Condo Price | $1,610,000 | $560,000 |
| Median Co-op Price | $834,500 | $237,500 |
| Median Rent | $5,300 | $2,530 |
| Active Listings | 360 | 187 |
| Rental Inventory | 368 | 192 |
| Days on Market | 117 | 107 |
| Price Cut Share | 9.4% | 10.7% |
| Monthly Sales Volume | 18 | 28 |
| YoY Price Change | -13.4% | +121.1% |
| YoY Rent Change | +10.4% | -9.6% |
| YoY Inventory Change | +13.6% | +34.5% |
| Subway Lines | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 A B C D E F M N Q R S W | N/A |
Midtown Manhattan is the city's primary commercial and transit hub, home to Grand Central Terminal, Rockefeller Center, Bryant Park, and the Empire State Building. The residential market features luxury condo towers, classic pre-war cooperatives, and postwar doorman buildings served by nearly every subway line in the system. Properties range from high-floor units with skyline panoramas to well-maintained co-ops along the tree-lined side streets east and west of Fifth Avenue.
View Full Market ReportMidwood is a tree-lined Brooklyn neighborhood anchored by the landmarked Fiske Terrace-Midwood Park Historic District, which preserves over 250 early 20th-century homes in Colonial Revival, Queen Anne, and Craftsman styles. The housing stock ranges from freestanding Victorian homes and limestone rowhouses to six-story prewar apartment buildings along Kings Highway. The B, Q, and F trains serve the neighborhood, and Brooklyn College's Georgian-style campus provides a notable architectural landmark at its southern edge.
View Full Market ReportTimes Sq-42 St (1 2 3 7 N Q R S W) — 0.2 mi
42 St-Port Authority (A C E) — 0.4 mi
Grand Central-42 St (4 5 6 7 S) — 0.4 mi
34 St-Herald Sq (B D F M N Q R W) — 0.4 mi
34 St-Penn Station (1 2 3 A C E) — 0.5 mi
No subway data available
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