December was a good time to be an apartment-hunter in Manhattan and Brooklyn: Rents dipped, inventory was robust, and incentives were plentiful.
Tag: rental
For apartment hunters in Manhattan and Brooklyn, rents continued to fall during November, and move-in incentives became even more generous.
For apartment hunters in Manhattan and Brooklyn, rents dropped and inventory grew during October, and move-in incentives were plentiful.
As rents declined and inventory continued to rise across Manhattan and Brooklyn, the market countered with more aggressive move-in incentives.
Across Manhattan and Brooklyn, rents were down and inventory was up during August, offering uncommon opportunities for apartment hunters.
Rental activity slowed again in Manhattan and Brooklyn during July, but landlords countered with generous terms and new move-in incentives.
The COVID-19 crisis stifled rental activity in Manhattan and Brooklyn during Q2, as vacancy rates reached the highest levels in at least 13 years.
In Manhattan and Brooklyn, rents fell across the board and vacancy levels hit a two-year high. As such, move-in incentives were more common in both boroughs.
In Manhattan, rents rose for studios and one- and two-bedroom homes but declined sharply for three-bedroom homes. In Brooklyn, rents rose slightly for one- and two-bedroom homes but dipped for studios and three-bedroom homes.