NYC Neighborhood Comparison
Side-by-side market data, transit, and neighborhood profiles to help you decide.
Queens
Brooklyn
| Metric | Woodhaven | Ditmas Park |
|---|---|---|
| Median Sale Price | $780,000 | $1,530,000 |
| Median Condo Price | N/A | N/A |
| Median Co-op Price | N/A | $557,500 |
| Median Rent | $2,125 | $2,750 |
| Active Listings | 24 | 47 |
| Rental Inventory | 12 | 86 |
| Days on Market | 0 | 49 |
| Price Cut Share | 8.3% | 17.0% |
| Monthly Sales Volume | 19 | 3 |
| YoY Price Change | -1.3% | +53.5% |
| YoY Rent Change | -13.3% | +10.0% |
| YoY Inventory Change | +26.3% | +11.9% |
| Subway Lines | N/A | N/A |
Woodhaven is one of Queens' most architecturally intact late 19th-century residential districts, with streets lined by Victorian frame houses, Neo-Renaissance rowhouses, and prewar apartment buildings. The J and Z trains run along Jamaica Avenue with stops at Woodhaven Boulevard, 85th Street-Forest Parkway, and 75th Street-Elderts Lane. Forest Park, the third-largest park in Queens, forms the neighborhood's northern boundary with wooded trails and recreational fields.
View Full Market ReportDitmas Park is a landmarked Brooklyn enclave recognized for its freestanding Victorian, Colonial Revival, Tudor, and Craftsman homes set back from the street with porches and landscaped yards. The B and Q trains serve the neighborhood at Cortelyou Road, Beverley Road, Newkirk Plaza, and Avenue H stations, and Prospect Park's 526 acres of green space sit just to the northwest. The historic district encompasses roughly 2,000 residential buildings dating from 1902 to 1914, making it one of the city's best-preserved collections of early 20th-century residential architecture.
View Full Market ReportNo subway data available
No subway data available
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