With median home prices hovering near $800,000 citywide, here's how new investors can build wealth through rental yields without overextending themselves.
As NYC's rental market tightens after years of oversupply, both sides are recalibrating expectations—but the gains aren't evenly distributed across the five boroughs.
As clearance rates soften citywide, data from key auctions and off-market sales reveal which outer-borough pockets are still climbing—and where investor confidence is cooling.
Skyrocketing rents in Astoria and Williamsburg are keeping aspiring homeowners locked in leases longer, while landlords grapple with regulation and rising costs.
With vacancy rates near historic lows and rent stabilization rules tightening, both renters and property owners face mounting pressure—and neither side is winning.
As supertall residential towers rise from Midtown to the Upper West Side, developers are banking on amenities and location to justify nine-figure penthouses—but longtime residents are asking what gets lost in the process.
As developers race to fill the pipeline with thousands of new units, landlords and tenants are caught in a complicated squeeze between rising construction costs and cooling rental demand.
With median prices hovering near $800k citywide, smart newcomers are learning where affordability meets future growth—and where to avoid overpaying for yesterday's story.
Vacancy rates have fallen to historic lows across Manhattan and Brooklyn, pushing rents higher—and forcing renters to understand the economic forces reshaping housing affordability.
Three major affordable housing developments breaking ground this summer promise to reshape neighborhoods long priced out of reach, but long-term affordability remains the real test.
With Manhattan asking prices hovering near $1.3 million and rents climbing faster than ever, investors are discovering that cap rates and cash-on-cash returns tell a far messier story than headlines suggest.
As trophy apartments flood NYC's rental market, landlords are forced to compete harder while affluent renters enjoy unprecedented leverage—but not everyone is winning.
As zoning reforms accelerate housing supply, developers are competing for scarce sites, pushing presale costs higher even as completion timelines stretch.