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2,038 drops
−5.9% avg
31.7K watching
Market intelligence

New York real estate market data,
updated daily.

Price-per-sqft trends, days on market, drop-depth distribution, and tier breakdowns for New York.

Live · last updated
Active drops
2,038
+79 in past 24h
Average drop
−5.9%
Across active drops
Biggest % drop
−59.2%
3BR villa · Malba
Biggest drop
−$9.50M
Upper East Side · townhouse
Total wiped
$388.95M
Across all drops
Neighborhoods
103
Scanned daily
Showing drops · last scan

Overview

Active drops
2,038
Average drop
−5.9%
Biggest drop
−59.2%
Total wiped
$388.95M
Avg size
2,407 sqft

Drops by area

Drops detected · last 14 days
105 53 0 05-2405-2505-2605-2705-2805-2905-3005-3106-0106-0206-0306-0406-0506-06
Top neighborhoods by drops
Brooklyn
434
Manhattan
309
Upper East Side
220
Staten Island
109
Flushing
82
Jersey City
81
Upper West Side
73
East Hampton
59
Long Island City
55
Southampton
53

Drops by tier

< 10%
1783
10–20%
230
20–30%
22
30–40%
1
40%+
2

Drops by bedroom count

Studio
67
1 BR
289
2 BR
475
3 BR
567
4 BR
334
5 BR
155
6+ BR
151

Top buildings · most active

No building-level data yet.

Avg price drop % by area

White Plains
5 drops
−9.9%
Pound Ridge
6 drops
−9.2%
Glen Oaks
6 drops
−8.7%
Glendale
5 drops
−8.4%
Little Neck
12 drops
−8.0%
Armonk
5 drops
−7.8%
East Elmhurst
6 drops
−7.3%
Mount Vernon
8 drops
−7.1%
East Hampton
59 drops
−7.0%
Greenwich
18 drops
−7.0%
New Rochelle
15 drops
−6.7%
Tribeca
30 drops
−6.6%

Drop volume by area · with avg $

Brooklyn
avg $107K
434
Manhattan
avg $204K
309
Upper East Side
avg $419K
220
Staten Island
avg $70K
109
Flushing
avg $82K
82
Jersey City
avg $50K
81
Upper West Side
avg $303K
73
East Hampton
avg $285K
59
Long Island City
avg $89K
55
Southampton
avg $316K
53
Chelsea
avg $338K
44
Tribeca
avg $535K
30

Price drop index · area & building

1. Brooklyn
434 drops · avg −5.8%
70
2. Manhattan
309 drops · avg −6.0%
53
3. Upper East Side
220 drops · avg −6.3%
41
4. Malba
3 drops · avg −23.1%
40
5. Dobbs Ferry
3 drops · avg −15.8%
28
6. Staten Island
109 drops · avg −5.2%
24
7. Upper West Side
73 drops · avg −6.1%
21
8. Scarsdale
3 drops · avg −12.1%
21
9. Flushing
82 drops · avg −5.7%
21
10. Old Greenwich
3 drops · avg −11.2%
20

Days on market vs drop size

0–30d
avg −5.9%
325
31–60d
avg −5.8%
710
61–90d
avg −6.0%
483
91–180d
avg −5.7%
337
180d+
avg −6.5%
183

Explore all neighborhoods

Brooklyn
434 avg −5.8%
Manhattan
309 avg −6.0%
Upper East Side
220 avg −6.3%
Staten Island
109 avg −5.2%
Flushing
82 avg −5.7%
Jersey City
81 avg −4.4%
Upper West Side
73 avg −6.1%
East Hampton
59 avg −7.0%
Long Island City
55 avg −4.5%
Southampton
53 avg −6.1%
Chelsea
44 avg −5.7%
Tribeca
30 avg −6.6%
Jamaica
24 avg −6.0%
Bayside
21 avg −4.3%
West Village
20 avg −6.4%
Greenwich
18 avg −7.0%
SoHo
18 avg −6.3%
New York
16 avg −5.5%
Whitestone
16 avg −4.7%
Yonkers
16 avg −4.9%
New Rochelle
15 avg −6.7%
Astoria
13 avg −3.7%
Forest Hills
13 avg −5.8%
Fresh Meadows
13 avg −4.8%
Hoboken
12 avg −6.1%
Little Neck
12 avg −8.0%
Mount Vernon
8 avg −7.1%
Rego Park
8 avg −5.4%
Queens Village
8 avg −5.5%
Rye
7 avg −6.1%
Ridgewood
7 avg −5.4%
Oakland Gardens
7 avg −6.3%
Pound Ridge
6 avg −9.2%
Glen Oaks
6 avg −8.7%
Saint Albans
6 avg −5.1%
East Elmhurst
6 avg −7.3%
Yorktown Heights
6 avg −4.8%
Maspeth
6 avg −4.6%
Cortlandt Manor
6 avg −5.3%
Howard Beach
6 avg −3.3%
Middle Village
6 avg −3.3%
College Point
6 avg −3.4%
New york
5 avg −6.6%
Armonk
5 avg −7.8%
Woodside
5 avg −3.8%
White Plains
5 avg −9.9%
Glendale
5 avg −8.4%
Kew Gardens
5 avg −5.7%
South Ozone Park
5 avg −3.8%
South Richmond Hill
5 avg −3.8%
Eastchester
4 avg −9.6%
Katonah
4 avg −7.7%
Sleepy Hollow
4 avg −9.1%
Briarcliff Manor
4 avg −6.7%
Bronxville
4 avg −4.1%
Somers
4 avg −5.4%
Springfield Gardens
4 avg −4.3%
Malba
3 avg −23.1%
Scarsdale
3 avg −12.1%
Old Greenwich
3 avg −11.2%
Croton On Hudson
3 avg −9.5%
Rosedale
3 avg −10.1%
Dobbs Ferry
3 avg −15.8%
Woodhaven
3 avg −9.8%
Larchmont
3 avg −4.5%
Tarrytown
3 avg −4.7%
Ossining
3 avg −7.9%
Bellerose
3 avg −4.8%
Mamaroneck
3 avg −6.3%
Ozone Park
3 avg −5.8%
Hartsdale
3 avg −4.3%
Hastings On Hudson
3 avg −4.8%
Bedford Hills
2 avg −13.0%
Irvington
2 avg −9.4%
Corona
2 avg −13.8%
Cambria Heights
2 avg −14.1%
Pleasantville
2 avg −13.2%
Thornwood
2 avg −8.3%
North Salem
2 avg −7.7%
Riverside
2 avg −4.4%
Far Rockaway
2 avg −8.1%
Mount Kisco
2 avg −7.8%
Chappaqua
2 avg −3.8%
Harrison
2 avg −4.8%
Hollis
2 avg −1.9%
Amagansett
1 avg −5.0%
Purchase
1 avg −5.3%
Pt Chester
1 avg −13.3%
Pelham
1 avg −10.9%
Bedford
1 avg −5.8%
College Pt
1 avg −10.0%
Ardsley
1 avg −14.7%
Hollis Hills
1 avg −7.9%
Water Mill
1 avg −2.9%
Buchanan
1 avg −10.7%
Staten island
1 avg −8.2%
Hawthorne
1 avg −9.1%
Douglaston
1 avg −1.9%
Richmond Hill
1 avg −4.8%
Rockaway Park
1 avg −6.3%
Port Chester
1 avg −4.2%
Lincolndale
1 avg −2.8%
Queens
1 avg −1.9%

New York real estate market data — how to read this page

This page tracks the New York luxury property market in real time using live listing data from Zillow, refreshed daily. The dataset captures the actual movement of asking prices: how many listings reduce their price, by how much, in which neighborhoods, and how quickly. Unlike a quarterly REBNY or UrbanDigs report, this view shows where the market is moving this week, neighborhood by neighborhood.

NYC luxury operates on a fundamentally different cycle than Miami or LA. Manhattan condo and co-op inventory turns slowly — co-op board approval, mortgage contingencies, and the prevalence of all-cash trophy deals mean listings typically sit 90–180+ days at the high end. The 2024–2026 cycle has been characterized by a persistent bid-ask gap: sellers anchored to 2021–22 peak prices, buyers anchored to current rates and tax bills. The result is more discrete price cuts on long-listed properties rather than the broad repricing seen in faster-moving markets.

Price per square foot — the NYC luxury map

NYC luxury per-sqft varies sharply by neighborhood, building type (condo vs co-op), and floor:

  • Billionaires' Row trophies (220 CPS, One57, 432 Park, Central Park Tower, 53W53): $4,000–7,500+/sqft
  • Upper East Side prewar co-ops (Park, Fifth, 5th–80s): $1,500–3,500/sqft
  • Tribeca + Soho (30 Park Place, Greenwich Lane, 56 Leonard): $2,500–4,500/sqft
  • West Village townhouses + Chelsea HighLine condos: $1,800–3,500/sqft
  • Upper West Side / Lincoln Square / Riverside: $1,500–3,000/sqft
  • Brooklyn prime (Brooklyn Heights, DUMBO, Park Slope brownstones): $1,200–2,500/sqft
  • The Hamptons (East Hampton Village, Sagaponack, Bridgehampton): $1,500–4,000/sqft (waterfront ultra-prime up to $8,000+)

Co-op pricing requires extra care — co-op maintenance often runs $4–10/sqft monthly, which is a material carrying cost that shifts the math vs an equivalently-priced condo with lower common charges + property tax.

Why NYC luxury has elevated drop activity in 2024–2026

  • Mansion tax + transfer tax stack. NYC's progressive mansion tax tops out at 3.9% for $25M+ sales, on top of NY State's 0.65% transfer tax and the NYC RPT. Total transfer cost on a $10M trophy can run 4–5%+ of the purchase price, eating into seller leverage.
  • Mortgage rate sensitivity. Manhattan luxury uses more leverage than people assume — even at the $5M+ tier, ~40-50% of transactions involve some financing. The 6-7% mortgage rate environment vs the 2.5-3% rates that supported 2021 peak pricing has compressed buyer appetite at the upper-mid tier ($3-8M).
  • Condo oversupply at the top. The 2014-2018 Billionaires' Row wave (220 CPS, 432 Park, Central Park Tower, One57, 53W53) continues to work through original sponsor unsold inventory. Resale into this supply means competing with sponsor-priced units that have professional marketing and price flexibility.
  • Co-op board friction. Co-op buyers in 2024-2026 are facing stricter post-tax-income, debt-service-ratio, and reserve requirements. Boards have rejected price-cut-driven deals where the seller is taking less than asking and the new pricing makes the buyer look underqualified. This forces some sellers to either hold or accept all-cash buyers at deeper cuts.

Categories of NYC luxury drops

Billionaires' Row / supertall condos

220 Central Park South, 432 Park, One57, 53W53, Central Park Tower. Lowest drop frequency among NYC luxury (these owners can afford to hold), but the largest absolute discounts when cuts happen. A 15% cut on a $40M unit is $6M of real motion.

Upper East Side prewar co-ops

Park, Fifth, and the upper 70s–80s blocks. Most active drop segment in NYC luxury by volume. Maintenance is the dominant pricing factor — a "cheap" co-op with $20K/month maintenance is not cheap. Drops cluster on listings where maintenance is rising or major capital assessments are pending.

Downtown condos (Tribeca, Soho, West Village)

The most active investor / second-home segment. Drops here are typically owner-relocation or trade-up driven; the carry-cost math is cleaner than co-ops, so price cuts move faster.

Brooklyn prime

Brooklyn Heights, DUMBO, Park Slope brownstones, Brooklyn Heights co-ops. Smaller absolute discounts but more listing volume; the buyer pool is broader (less weighted toward all-cash trophy buyers), so cuts close faster.

Hamptons

The most cyclical NYC-area segment. Drops cluster post-summer (Sept-Oct) when sellers who hoped for a Hamptons-season sale haven't moved. Different inventory cycle than year-round Manhattan.

How to read the data panels

  • Drops by area — count of currently-active listings with price reductions. Upper East Side and Downtown typically lead by volume.
  • Avg drop % by area — when a neighborhood's average climbs above 10%, motivated-seller density is elevated.
  • Days on market vs drop size — NYC luxury DOM runs 90-180 days; the deepest cuts cluster among 200+ day listings.
  • Drops by tier — the $2-5M tier is most active (mortgage-rate sensitivity); $20M+ has smallest volume but largest absolute discounts.

Buyer playbook — what's different about NYC

  • Co-op vs condo math matters more than headline price. A $5M co-op with $8K/month maintenance has a very different all-in vs a $5M condo with $3K/month common charges + property tax. Always model the all-in monthly carrying cost before evaluating the discount.
  • Pull the building's financials before MOU on co-ops. Reserve fund balance, recent assessments, pending capital projects, and the mortgage-on-the-underlying-building (yes, co-ops can have building-level debt). A "cheap" unit in a financially distressed building is not cheap.
  • Mansion tax + transfer cost reality. A $10M Manhattan condo purchase has roughly $400K-500K in transfer tax + mansion tax (varies by price tier). Build this into your ROI math.
  • Co-op board approval risk. Below-asking offers, especially on units where the seller is taking a meaningful loss, can trigger board concerns about your financial qualifications. Be prepared to show stronger reserves than for a market-price offer.
  • Lawyer + closing costs typically 2-4% all-in in NYC, on top of mansion + transfer taxes.

Methodology

Luxury Price Drops scans active NYC listings on Zillow daily, capturing original listing price, every price change, and current asking price. Drops are detected within minutes. All figures derived from actual published asking prices — listing-side data, not transaction-side. For closed-transaction values, ACRIS and REBNY are authoritative.

Related NYC + US resources

Luxury Price Drops is an independent analytics platform — not a brokerage. We publish public listing-market data so buyers and investors can read the NYC luxury market clearly. We do not list, sell, or represent properties.

Frequently asked questions

What is the average price per square foot in New York luxury real estate?

NYC luxury spans roughly $1,200–2,500/sqft for Brooklyn prime (Brooklyn Heights, DUMBO, Park Slope), $1,500–3,000/sqft for Upper West Side, $1,500–3,500/sqft for Upper East Side prewar co-ops, $1,800–3,500/sqft for West Village townhouses and Chelsea condos, $2,500–4,500/sqft for Tribeca and Soho, and $4,000–7,500+/sqft for Billionaires' Row trophies (220 CPS, One57, 432 Park, Central Park Tower). The Hamptons spans $1,500–4,000/sqft with waterfront ultra-prime up to $8,000+. Always compare to the specific building, especially for co-ops where maintenance varies dramatically.

Is the NYC luxury market crashing in 2026?

Not crashing — but characterized by a persistent bid-ask gap. Sellers anchor to 2021-22 peak pricing; buyers anchor to current 6-7% mortgage rates and elevated property/transfer taxes. The result is more discrete price cuts on long-listed properties rather than broad repricing. Manhattan condo and co-op inventory turns slowly (90-180+ day DOM is normal at the high end), so motivated-seller drops are concentrated in specific properties rather than across the whole market.

How is NYC market data collected on this page?

We scan active NYC listings on Zillow daily, capturing original listing price, every price change, and current asking price. Drops are detected within minutes. All figures derived from actual published asking prices — listing-side data. For closed-transaction values, ACRIS (NYC's Automated City Register) and REBNY (Real Estate Board of New York) are authoritative.

How often is the NYC market data updated?

Daily. Listings are scanned every day and the panels on this page refresh continuously throughout the day. New price drops appear within minutes of being posted.

What's the difference between a co-op and a condo in NYC luxury?

Condos: you own the unit and a percentage of common areas. Lower carrying costs (common charges + property tax typically $3-5/sqft monthly). Easy to finance, easy to rent or sublease. Co-ops: you own shares in a corporation that owns the building, plus a proprietary lease for your unit. Maintenance fees (which include property tax + building expenses) typically $4-10/sqft monthly. Board approval required for purchase (financial disclosure, interviews, frequent rejection of below-market-price deals). Co-ops dominate Upper East Side prewar; condos dominate Downtown and Billionaires' Row. The all-in monthly carrying cost difference between a co-op and an equivalently-priced condo can be 30-50%.

What are the all-in transfer costs for an NYC luxury purchase?

For a $10M Manhattan condo: NYC mansion tax (~3.25% at this tier) + NY State transfer tax (0.65%) + NYC RPT (~1.425% for $5M+) + title insurance (~$8-15K) + attorney + mortgage recording tax (if financed) + miscellaneous closing costs. Total transfer-side costs are roughly 4-5% of purchase price, mostly paid by the buyer. Build this into your ROI math before evaluating any 'discount.'

Where are most NYC luxury price drops happening?

By volume: Upper East Side prewar co-ops and Downtown condos (Tribeca, Soho, West Village). Upper East Side drops cluster on listings with rising maintenance or pending capital assessments; Downtown drops are more owner-relocation driven. By absolute discount size: Billionaires' Row supertalls (220 CPS, 432 Park, One57, Central Park Tower) — fewer drops but larger dollar amounts when they happen. Brooklyn prime (Heights, DUMBO) and Hamptons add seasonal volume. Use the 'drops by area' panel for current activity.

What should I check on a co-op building before making an offer?

Three documents are essential: (1) the reserve fund balance and recent capital assessment history; (2) the building's underlying mortgage (yes, co-op buildings can have debt; this affects monthly maintenance); (3) the last 24 months of board meeting minutes (look for pending major repairs — facade work, elevator replacement, plumbing risers). Also ask about the co-op's flip tax structure (sellers often pay 1-3% to the building on resale). A 'cheap' unit in a financially distressed building with a pending $1M facade assessment is not cheap.

Is Luxury Price Drops a NYC real estate brokerage?

No. Luxury Price Drops is an independent analytics platform that publishes public listing-market data. We do not list, sell, or represent properties. Use this data to read the market, then contact listing agents on Zillow directly to view and transact.

Independent analytics platform — not a brokerage. Price drops are a natural part of any healthy market and often represent opportunity. All data is sourced from publicly available listings. Read more