Milton Coste

Licensed Real Estate Associate Broker

(917) 416-7433

Free Seller Tool

Should I Sell My NYC Home Now or Wait?

Selling is part math, part timing, part life. Answer seven quick questions and this tool weighs whether now is your moment or whether waiting pays off, then explains the reasoning for your situation.

Built by Milton Coste, Licensed Real Estate Associate Broker, Keller Williams NYC.

Answer 7 quick questions

Why are you thinking of selling?
Your current mortgage rate vs today (~6.75%)?
How long have you owned this home?
Your equity position?
If it is a co-op, how long have you held it?
Can you wait for the right buyer?
Is the home ready to show?

Your recommendation

Your best move

Sell now
Hold
50%50%

Why

    What really drives the timing decision

    After more than 25 years selling across Upper Manhattan, Queens, and beyond, I have learned that the "should I sell now" question is rarely about predicting the market. It comes down to a handful of personal factors. The biggest one in this cycle is the rate lock-in effect: if you are sitting on a mortgage below 4%, selling means giving that up and buying your next home at today’s rates, which quietly raises your real cost of moving. If you have a clear reason to move, that matters less. If you are only chasing the top of the market, it matters a lot.

    The capital-gains clock

    If the home is your primary residence and you have owned and lived in it for at least two of the last five years, you can typically exclude up to $250,000 of gain if single, or $500,000 if married filing jointly. Selling before the two-year mark can forfeit that exclusion and expose you to short-term gains. Confirm your specifics with a tax advisor, but the two-year line is worth knowing before you list.

    The other levers are your equity (thin equity gets eaten by selling costs), a co-op flip tax on a short hold, your timeline flexibility, and whether the home is ready to show. The tool above turns those into a clear lean. When you are ready for the number that anchors the whole decision, get a free comparative market analysis, then see what you would keep with the net proceeds calculator and how I market a home on the sell your NYC property page.

    Milton Coste, Licensed Real Estate Associate Broker

    Milton Coste

    Licensed Real Estate Associate Broker

    Hablo Español

    Get a real valuation to decide with

    I will prepare an analysis of your home and your options, free and with no obligation, so you can decide with real numbers.

    Your information goes only to Milton. It is never sold or shared.

    Common questions about selling timing

    Is now a good time to sell in NYC?

    It depends far more on your situation than on a market forecast. If you have a real reason to move, strong equity, and a show-ready home, now is usually fine. If you are locked into a sub-4% rate with no need to move, waiting often pays. The tool above weighs your specifics.

    How does my low mortgage rate affect selling?

    If you sell and buy again, you trade a low locked rate for today’s higher rate on your next home, which raises your monthly cost. That rate lock-in is the single biggest reason many owners with cheap mortgages choose to wait unless they have a clear reason to move.

    Will I owe capital-gains tax if I sell?

    For a primary residence owned and lived in for at least two of the last five years, you can generally exclude up to $250,000 of gain ($500,000 married filing jointly). Selling sooner can forfeit that. Always confirm with a tax advisor for your situation.

    Does a co-op flip tax change the timing?

    It can. If your building charges a flip tax and you have only held the co-op a short time, that fee plus normal selling costs can erase much of a short-hold gain. A longer hold absorbs those costs better.

    What is the best season to sell in NYC?

    Spring and early fall are typically the most active windows, but a well-prepared, well-priced home sells in any season. Readiness and price usually matter more than the calendar.

    Milton Coste, Licensed Real Estate Associate Broker, Keller Williams NYC. NY License #10301213304. This tool is general guidance, not legal, tax, or financial advice.

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