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Manhattan apartment rents climb to highest on record for April

Manhattan apartment rents rose last month to a new high for April, an increase that suggests another record-shattering summer to come.

Published on: May 09, 2024 11:23 AM IST
Bloomberg |
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(Bloomberg) -- Manhattan apartment rents rose last month to a new high for April, an increase that suggests another record-shattering summer to come.

Manhattan apartment rents rose last month to a new high for April, an increase that suggests another record-shattering summer to come. (Representational photo) (Pixabay)
Manhattan apartment rents rose last month to a new high for April, an increase that suggests another record-shattering summer to come. (Representational photo) (Pixabay)

New leases were signed at a median of $4,250, up $9 from last April, according to appraiser Miller Samuel Inc. and brokerage Douglas Elliman Real Estate.

Landlords continue to push prices higher; tenants have no choice but to agree to pay more

Rents now have climbed annually in three of the past four months. As landlords continue to push prices higher and vacancies stay near historic lows, prospective tenants realize they have no choice but to agree to pay more. As usual, competition is only expected to intensify as the weather warms.

Also Read: Office buildings in Mumbai’s Bandra Kurla Complex command higher prices than Manhattan

"The question is whether we’re going to beat last summer’s all-time highs,” said Jonathan Miller, president of Miller Samuel. “Based on where we are now, it seems like it.”

The median soared to $4,400 in July 2023, and in the fall declined as much as 9% before beginning to inch upward in December.

Also Read: Bengaluru-based RMZ Corporation exploring real estate expansion opportunities in the US, EU and UK

Even as apartments got more expensive, leasing soared, with 42% more deals signed last month than in April 2023. Miller partly attributed the jump to “churn,” as tenants declined renewals to move elsewhere, possibly motivated by a growing number of listed apartments. Inventory in Manhattan rose 23% from a year earlier to 7,996 units.

Also Read: New York City’s rent-stabilized tenants face 3rd year of price hikes as renters and landlords grapple with rising costs

Rents also hit a record for April in Brooklyn, where the median was $3,599, up 2.8% from a year earlier. In northwest Queens — the neighborhoods closest to Manhattan — the median rent fell 8% annually to $3,244.

©2024 Bloomberg L.P.

 
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