Submarket intelligence

Where NYC capital is moving — block by block.

A current read on the Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Queens submarkets tracked and transacted in. Key takeaway first, every figure sourced.

Manhattan

South of 96th Street

Core Manhattan below 96th remains the deepest, most liquid investment-sales market in the city — the benchmark every outer-borough deal is priced against.

Core Manhattan Benchmark

  • Focus: multifamily, mixed-use & development below 96th St.
  • Role: the liquidity and pricing benchmark for NYC capital.
  • Off-market: private-deal activity surging citywide.

Source: The Real Deal →

Brooklyn

The core Brooklyn neighborhoods

Brooklyn led the city in off-market volume at about $5.4B. These are the neighborhoods where rents, prices, and development upside are converging.

Fort Greene +107.6% YoY

  • Top-5 citywide price gainer (May 2026).
  • About 13% appreciation in both sale prices and rents.
  • Brownstone & boutique multifamily demand.

Source: Milton Coste / DeFalco →

Bedford-Stuyvesant +27.8% YoY

  • Median home price around $1.6M (early 2026).
  • PPSF roughly $850–$1,100.
  • Deep value-add & multifamily pipeline.

Source: LoopNet →

Crown Heights +18% YoY

  • Median sale around $1.1–1.33M.
  • Rents +4.97% MoM (Apr 2026), outpacing Brooklyn.
  • Asking cap rates ~5.9%–9.72%.

Source: Ronit Abraham →

Gowanus & Williamsburg Development

  • Top development-ROI watchlists.
  • Rezoned industrial corridors enabling assemblage.
  • Prime ground-up & mixed-use opportunities.

Source: Mendy Realty →

Park Slope, PLG & Fort Greene Townhouse

  • Mid-to-high-income, supply-constrained blocks.
  • Brownstone multifamily & condo conversion demand.
  • Strong rent growth tailwinds.

Source: DeFalco Realty →

Red Hook, DUMBO & Greenpoint Waterfront

  • Waterfront & loft-conversion plays.
  • Mixed-use and creative-class demand.
  • Long-horizon development upside.

Source: The Real Deal →

Queens

Astoria, LIC, Whitestone & Malba

Queens did about $3.43B in investment-sales volume in 2025 (+16% on 558 deals) and led the city in off-market deal count — roughly 5,400 deals, up 21%.

Long Island City ~14,700 units

  • OneLIC Plan rezoned 54 blocks — largest in 25+ years.
  • Market asking rent ~$4,326/unit vs NYC avg ~$3,616.
  • Premier ground-up development market.

Source: CoStar →

Malba (Whitestone) +61% YoY

  • Median sale to a record $2.5M in Q1 2026.
  • 5th priciest neighborhood in NYC.
  • First Queens nabe ever in the top five.

Source: ARCFE →

Astoria ~4.2% cap

  • Three-family product trading around a ~4.2% cap.
  • Steady renter demand & transit access.
  • Active mid-market multifamily flow.

Source: Gadura Real Estate →

Submarkets FAQ

Answers to common questions

Which NYC submarkets are appreciating fastest in 2026?

Fort Greene posted one of the largest year-over-year price gains in the city at roughly +107.6% (a top-five citywide gainer in May 2026), while Malba in Whitestone, Queens jumped about +61% YoY to a record $2.5M median, making it the fifth-priciest neighborhood in NYC and the first Queens neighborhood ever in the top five.

What's happening with prices in Bedford-Stuyvesant?

Bed-Stuy's median home price sits around $1.6M, up about 27.8% year-over-year in early 2026, with price-per-square-foot generally in the $850–$1,100 range. It remains one of Brooklyn's most active value-add and multifamily markets.

Is Crown Heights a good market for multifamily?

Crown Heights has a median sale price around $1.1–1.33M, up about 18% YoY, with rents rising roughly 4.97% month-over-month in April 2026 — outpacing both Bed-Stuy and Brooklyn overall. Asking cap rates run roughly 5.9%–9.72% depending on stabilization, making it a core multifamily target.

Why is Long Island City a development hotspot?

The OneLIC Neighborhood Plan rezoned 54 blocks and enables about 14,700 new apartments — the largest neighborhood rezoning in 25+ years. Market asking rents run around $4,326 per unit versus a NYC average near $3,616, supporting the development thesis.

How active is the Queens investment-sales market?

Queens recorded about $3.43B in investment-sales volume in 2025, up 16% on 558 transactions, and led the city in deal count for off-market activity (around 5,400 deals, up 21%). It's one of the most active boroughs by volume right now.

Thinking about buying, selling, or building in NYC?

Start with a direct conversation — a clear market read first, and the right deal when the timing fits.