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In Manhattan, the Gap Between Hot and Cold Neighborhoods Is the Widest in Years

Date:
09 Jun 2026
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If you’ve been eyeing Manhattan real estate and wondering whether now is a good time to buy, the answer depends almost entirely on where you’re looking. Some neighborhoods are moving fast, others are sitting quietly, and the gap between them is wider than it’s been in years.

Susan Holman, a licensed associate real estate broker at Alta Real Estate who has spent decades navigating Manhattan’s co-ops, condos, and townhouses, says the market is anything but uniform. Downtown neighborhoods, Chelsea, Tribeca, Soho, and the West Village, are drawing intense buyer competition. Downtown Brooklyn is also surging. Meanwhile, parts of the Upper East Side are softer, with more inventory and more room to negotiate.

Where the Market Stands

Inventory is tight across most of Manhattan, and the number of contracts signed is down about 11% from last year. That might sound like a slow market, but the shortage of listings is keeping prices firm in the most desirable neighborhoods, even as some pockets offer real value.

What’s keeping sellers on the sidelines? Some are watching economic headlines and waiting. Others are holding out for prices that no longer match what buyers will pay. “It’s usually price, price, and price,” Holman says. “It’s not more complicated than that.” When sellers accept realistic pricing, things move. When they don’t, listings sit.

What’s Driving the Divide

Several forces are widening the gap between hot and cold neighborhoods.

Carrying costs have become a bigger factor than ever. Holman says she’s seeing more focus on monthly expenses, maintenance fees, taxes, and mortgage payments, than at any point in her career. Buyers are running detailed affordability calculations before making a move, and neighborhoods with high carrying costs relative to perceived value are losing out.

Renovation anxiety is also filtering buyer behavior. Purchasers, especially in co-ops, are increasingly reluctant to take on gut renovations. Uncertainty around timing and board approval processes is enough to make many walk away from an otherwise attractive unit. Move-in ready properties are getting far more attention as a result.

Finally, about half of Manhattan buyers are paying all-cash, making them largely immune to interest rate fluctuations. The market above $5 million is especially active, with wealthy domestic and international buyers continuing to purchase regardless of rate movements or global uncertainty.

How Fast Things Are Moving

In the hottest neighborhoods, well-priced two-bedrooms are drawing strong buyer turnout and selling quickly. In softer areas like parts of the Upper East Side, homes are sitting longer and sellers are more open to negotiation.

The rental market, meanwhile, runs hot from late March through early September, a reliable annual pattern driven by people who want to live in Manhattan but aren’t ready to buy. That seasonal demand puts additional pressure on the sales market during spring and summer, as renters priced out of leases begin considering ownership.

What Buyers Should Do Now

The current moment offers a genuine opportunity, particularly in neighborhoods that aren’t generating headlines. “You will get good deals on the Upper East Side because you do have more inventory,” Holman notes. Buyers flexible on neighborhood may find better value than they expect. Those targeting Chelsea, Tribeca, or the West Village should be prepared to act quickly – well-priced properties in those areas are not waiting around.

What Sellers Should Know

The biggest mistake sellers are making right now is overpricing. Buyers are more informed than ever, using online tools to research comparable sales before they ever walk through the door. If a home has been sitting, price is almost certainly the issue. Holman’s advice is direct: sellers who adjust to market reality start seeing movement. Those who hold out often wait a long time.

Where Investors Are Looking

For small investors, Holman points to newer condominiums in Midtown and the Upper East Side as solid long-term holds. “Buy the two-bedroom or three-bedroom condominium in Manhattan,” she says. “They’re going to appreciate very well over time.” For buyers willing to take on renovation work, Brooklyn neighborhoods like Red Hook, Carroll Gardens, and Bushwick offer strong return potential, especially for those considering small multi-family buildings where rental income can offset carrying costs.

Looking Ahead

Manhattan’s market is not one market right now; it’s a collection of micro-communities, each behaving differently based on price point, carrying costs, and housing type. The neighborhoods people have always wanted remain competitive, while those with more inventory are offering real negotiating leverage. As inventory constraints persist and cash buyers continue to dominate the upper end, this divide is likely to hold through the rest of 2025. Buyers and sellers who understand which side of that line they’re operating on will make sharper decisions, and avoid the costly mistake of treating Manhattan as a single, predictable market.

About the Expert: Susan Holman is a Licensed Associate Real Estate Broker, Alta Real Estate, Manhattan, NY. Focus: Co-ops, condominiums, townhouses, and investment properties across Manhattan and Downtown Brooklyn, with a client base that includes domestic buyers, international investors, and corporate relocations.

This article is intended for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or investment advice. The views and opinions expressed herein reflect those of the individuals quoted and do not represent an endorsement of any company, product, or service mentioned. Readers should conduct their own due diligence and consult qualified professionals before making any investment decisions.