What actually sets the value of a NYC home
A price is only as good as the data behind it. In more than 25 years pricing co-ops, condos, and townhouses across Manhattan, Queens, and the Hudson Valley, I have found that an accurate New York City valuation comes down to a handful of factors a national estimate cannot see:
- Recent closed sales in your building and your line. Two identical-looking units sell for very different numbers depending on floor, exposure, and layout. The right comparables come from your specific stack, not a five-block radius.
- Your building's financial health. Reserve fund, recent assessments, and monthly maintenance or common charges move what a buyer will pay. A low-maintenance building with a healthy reserve commands a premium.
- Co-op versus condo, and the flip tax. Board rules, sublet policy, and a flip tax shape the pool of buyers who can actually bid, which shapes price.
- Current absorption. The live sale-to-list ratio and days on market in your area tell us whether to price at the top of the range or anchor for competing offers.
- Condition and renovation level. A renovated kitchen and bath, in-unit laundry, and outdoor space each carry a measurable, local premium.
Why an online estimate falls short in New York City
Automated valuation tools were built for single-family houses with public deed prices. New York is different. When you buy a co-op, you are buying shares in a corporation, so there is no recorded sale price the way there is for a house, and the national models are left guessing. NYC's listing data, the RLS feed, is not fully syndicated to those tools either, so their comparable set is incomplete. Building-specific facts such as a pending assessment, a land lease, or a flip tax can swing real value by six figures, and no algorithm prices them. That is why an online estimate often shows a range wide enough to drive a truck through. A wide range is not a pricing strategy.
A CMA is not an appraisal
A comparative market analysis (CMA) is a broker's pricing analysis that recommends a realistic asking-price range and a strategy to sell. It is free and it is what you use to set your listing price. An appraisal is a separate, paid report from a licensed appraiser that a buyer's lender orders during the mortgage process. You need a CMA first; the appraisal comes later, on the buyer's side.
What your free CMA includes
- Recent comparable closed sales in your line and building, not just your ZIP code.
- The active competition a buyer would weigh against your home today.
- A realistic asking-price range and the reasoning behind it.
- An expected days-on-market read for your price point and neighborhood.
- A net-proceeds view so you know what you keep after costs. Run your own numbers with the closing cost calculator.
You are under no obligation to list. Many sellers ask for a CMA a year before they move, just to plan. If and when you are ready, you can read how I market and price a home on the sell your NYC property page and the guide to selling a NYC apartment. For the data behind valuation, see how much your NYC apartment is worth and your neighborhood's market report.
Thinking about selling? Start with the number.
Common questions about NYC home valuations
How accurate are online home value estimates in NYC?
For NYC co-ops and condos, online estimates are often off by a wide margin because share sales carry no recorded price, the RLS listing feed is not fully syndicated to those tools, and building-level factors are invisible to them. Treat an online number as a rough starting point, not a listing price.
What is the difference between a CMA and an appraisal?
A CMA is a free broker analysis used to set your asking price and strategy. An appraisal is a paid report from a licensed appraiser, ordered by the buyer's lender during the mortgage process. You use the CMA to price and list; the appraisal happens later on the buyer's side.
Does requesting a valuation mean I have to sell or list with you?
No. The valuation is free and carries no obligation. Many owners request one simply to understand their equity or plan ahead. If you decide to move forward later, we can talk then.
What information do you need to value my apartment?
The address and unit number are enough to start. I pull recent sales in your building and line, the active competition, and your building's profile from the records. Anything you add about renovations, views, or monthly charges sharpens the estimate.
How long does it take to get my CMA?
Most valuations are ready within a day or two. If you are on a tighter timeline, call or text (917) 416-7433 and I will prioritize it.
Ready for your number?
Free, no obligation, and grounded in real NYC sales data.
Request My Free CMAMilton Coste, Licensed Real Estate Associate Broker, Keller Williams NYC. NY License #10301213304.