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The Manhattan real estate market recorded a near metric high the first three quarters of 2025, the strongest sustained pace since before the pandemic. Luxury prices hit all-time highs, cash buyers set a new record at 64% of all transactions, and new development closings surged 71% year over year.
However, the market is splitting in two. Properties above $10 million rose 37% in Q1 alone, while mid-market signed contracts between $1 million and $3 million fell 10%, squeezed by mortgage rates hovering near 6.5% and a for-sale inventory running 40% below its 10-year average.
Peter Zinkovetsky of Avenue Law Firm is a Manhattan real estate lawyer who has represented buyers and sellers of condominiums, townhomes, and new development properties across New York City. Below is a comprehensive breakdown of Manhattan’s real estate statistics, covering sales volume, pricing trends, neighborhood data, cash buyer activity, office-to-residential conversions, closing costs, and how Manhattan compares to broader national benchmarks.
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Should you hire Avenue Law Firm, you can rest assured that you are getting top rated legal representation every step of the way. We know how important it is to understand your rights and responsibilities in every transaction, and we are here to help. Call us today if you need legal assistance or advice in regards to real estate transactions, personal injury law, or business law.
The most significant trend in Manhattan real estate in 2025 was the growing divide between the luxury tier and the middle market. Properties priced above $10 million surged while the $1 million to $3 million segment lost momentum, creating what multiple analysts described as a two-speed market.
The numbers are striking. Sales of properties priced above $10 million rose 37% in Q1 2025, according to the Douglas Elliman Report prepared by Miller Samuel. The average luxury sale price reached a record $10.3 million, and the entry-level luxury threshold climbed to $4.4 million, up nearly 20% year over year. Price per square foot in this tier hit $3,173, the highest level in five years.
For the full year, Manhattan’s luxury segment (properties at $4 million and above) totaled nearly $12 billion in signed contracts across 1,436 deals, according to Olshan Realty’s year-end report, making 2025 the second-biggest luxury year on record since tracking began in 2006. Among those, 284 contracts were signed at $10 million or more.
| Metric | 2025 Value | Year-over-Year Change |
|---|---|---|
| Average luxury sale price (top 10%) | $10.3 million | +36.9% |
| Luxury price per sq ft | $3,173 | Highest in 5 years |
| Luxury contracts signed ($4M+) | 1,436 | +11% |
| Trophy contracts ($10M+) | 284 | 2nd highest since 2006 |
| $20M+ sales (2024 full year) | Per Compass Q4 report | +58.3% |
| Mid-market contracts ($1M-$3M) | Declined | -10% in early 2025 |
Sources: Douglas Elliman/Miller Samuel quarterly reports; Olshan Realty 2025 year-end report; Compass Q4 2024 market report.
Meanwhile, the mid-market told a different story. Signed contracts for properties priced between $1 million and $3 million fell 10% in early 2025, squeezed by affordability pressures and mortgage rates hovering near 6.5%. Buyers in this range are more likely to need financing, and monthly carrying costs stretched budgets thin. Some shifted to rentals, while others looked to outer boroughs.
Manhattan is in the midst of its largest wave of office-to-residential conversions in two decades. The shift is being driven by elevated office vacancy rates, new tax incentives, and the city’s persistent housing shortage.
In 2025, 5.0 million square feet of office space began conversion to residential use, the highest annual total in 20 years, according to Cushman & Wakefield. That figure is up sharply from the pace of recent years: 1.6 million square feet in 2023 and 3.3 million in 2024.
The pipeline ahead is even larger. Developers plan to begin construction on 9.5 million square feet of conversions in 2026, according to Bisnow, with a total forward pipeline of 9.8 million square feet across 31 projects.
| Conversion Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| 2023 conversion starts | 1.6 million sq ft |
| 2024 conversion starts | 3.3 million sq ft |
| 2025 conversion starts | 5.0 million sq ft (20-year high) |
| 2026 planned starts | 9.5 million sq ft |
| Total forward pipeline | 9.8 million sq ft, 31 projects |
| Manhattan office vacancy rate | 22.3% |
Sources: Cushman & Wakefield office-to-residential reports (2025); Bisnow; CBRE.
The scale of individual projects underscores the shift. The former Pfizer headquarters near Grand Central Terminal is being converted into roughly 1,600 rental apartments, making it the largest office conversion project in the United States. At 5 Times Square, a 1,250-unit conversion is underway in a building that is barely two decades old. On Billionaires’ Row, TF Cornerstone acquired Tower 57 and announced plans for 350 apartments, 25% of which will be affordable.
Key Takeaway: Manhattan’s office-to-residential conversion pipeline has exploded from 1.6 million square feet in 2023 to 5.0 million in 2025, with 9.5 million more planned for 2026. However, nearly all conversion projects produce rental units, not condominiums, meaning the for-sale market remains supply-constrained.
Policy changes have accelerated the trend. The 467-m tax incentive, enacted in 2024, provides up to 35 years of tax relief for conversion projects that incorporate affordable housing. The city’s Office Conversion Accelerator Program, launched in 2023, streamlined approvals. Manhattan’s office vacancy rate remains at 22.3%, nearly double pre-pandemic levels, ensuring a steady supply of buildings that are candidates for conversion.
Peter Zinkovetsky, Esq., is the founder of Avenue Law Firm and a dedicated real estate lawyer in Manhattan. He has built a practice focused on residential and commercial real estate transactions. He represents clients across a broad spectrum of property types, ranging from luxury condominiums and co-ops to townhomes and new development projects.
Mr. Zinkovetsky is known for providing clear, strategic counsel to a diverse clientele, including first-time homebuyers, seasoned real estate investors, and international buyers navigating the NYC market. He is admitted to practice law in the state of New York and has been recognized for his commitment to excellence in the field of real estate law. Clients and peers alike value his meticulous attention to detail during contract negotiations and his ability to streamline the closing process in Manhattan’s high-stakes environment.
Cash purchases dominated Manhattan real estate in 2025 at levels never previously recorded. The trend reflects a market increasingly shaped by ultra-high-net-worth individuals, family offices, and international investors.
For the full year, 64% of all Manhattan apartment sales were all-cash, the highest annual share ever, according to The New York Times, citing Miller Samuel data. In Q4 2025, the condo-specific cash share reached 74%, another record. For properties above $3 million, roughly 90% of sales were cash.
To put this in context: the national average for cash purchases is approximately 25%, according to the National Association of Realtors. Manhattan’s historical norm was 40% to 50%. The 2025 figure represents a structural shift, not a temporary spike.
| Cash Buyer Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Manhattan cash share, full year 2025 | 64% (record) |
| Q4 2025 condo cash share | 74% (record) |
| Cash share for sales over $3 million | ~90% |
| National cash purchase average | ~25% |
| Manhattan historical average (pre-2023) | 40-50% |
| Median price, cash sales | $1.25 million |
| Median price, financed sales | $1.035 million |
| LLC purchases (NYC-wide, 2025) | 11.35% of all sales |
Sources: Miller Samuel/Douglas Elliman Q4 2025 report; PropertyShark 2025 buyer profiles study; National Association of Realtors; Habitat Magazine; Center for NYC Neighborhoods.
The price gap between cash and financed transactions is notable. In Manhattan, the median price for cash sales was $1.25 million, $215,000 higher than the median for mortgage-backed purchases. In competitive neighborhoods, the gap widens further: PropertyShark data showed the West Village cash-sale median exceeded the neighborhood median by $462,000, and in Hudson Yards, the gap was nearly $2 million.
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Should you hire Avenue Law Firm, you can rest assured that you are getting top rated legal representation every step of the way. We know how important it is to understand your rights and responsibilities in every transaction, and we are here to help. Call us today if you need legal assistance or advice in regards to real estate transactions, personal injury law, or business law.
Manhattan’s for-sale housing supply remains constrained despite a modest uptick in listings. The imbalance between buyer demand and available units continues to support prices across most segments.
Active listings stood at approximately 6,100 to 6,500 units in late 2025, depending on the reporting period. Corcoran’s Q4 2025 report placed listed supply at just over 6,100, a 4% annual increase but still below historical norms. Luxury inventory above $3 million fell 12% to 16% year over year, tightening the segment where demand is strongest.
New construction is not keeping pace. Only approximately 3,200 new condo units are projected for delivery through 2027, roughly 1,000 units per year against a 10-year average of 1,700. Office-to-residential conversions are adding meaningful supply, but nearly all conversion projects produce rental units, not condominiums, leaving the for-sale market structurally undersupplied.
Manhattan’s rental vacancy rate sits at approximately 2.7%, among the lowest in the nation, with the average rent reaching $5,499 per month in December 2025, up 5.9% year over year.
Key Takeaway: Manhattan’s new condo pipeline (~1,000 units/year) is running 40% below the 10-year average of 1,700. Office conversions add rental supply, not for-sale inventory. This mismatch supports continued price stability for condo and townhome owners.
Transaction volume rose across nearly every quarter of 2025, marking the strongest sustained sales growth since before the pandemic.
In Q3 2025, Manhattan recorded 3,158 closed sales, a 13.4% year-over-year increase and the highest quarterly total in more than two years, according to the Elliman Report. Condo closings led at 1,407 units (+16.6%). In Q4, closings came in at roughly 2,800 transactions, up 3% year over year and the strongest fourth quarter in three years.
| Quarter | Closings | YoY Change | Median Sale Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| Q1 2025 | 2,672 | +17% | $1,175,000 |
| Q2 2025 | ~3,000 | +17% | $1,200,000 |
| Q3 2025 | 3,158 | +13.4% | $1,180,000 |
| Q4 2025 | ~2,800 | +3% | $1,125,000-$1,180,000 |
Sources: Miller Samuel/Douglas Elliman quarterly reports; Brown Harris Stevens Q1 2025 report; Corcoran Q4 2025 report.
Signed contracts extended their upward streak through Q4, marking seven consecutive quarters of annual growth in contract activity, a pattern seen only twice in nearly two decades. Average days on market dropped to 108 days in Q4, more than a week faster than the year-ago period.
New development sales were a particular bright spot. Manhattan new development closings surged 71% year over year in Q3 2025, reaching their highest market share (18.3% of all sales) in more than six years.
Key Takeaway: Manhattan posted five consecutive quarters of annual sales gains through Q4 2025, with new development sales surging 71%. Signed contracts grew for seven straight quarters, the longest such streak since before 2009.
Manhattan’s pricing varies dramatically by neighborhood. The table below reflects 2025 data from multiple brokerage reports and the NYC Department of Finance.
| Neighborhood | Approx. Price Per Sq Ft (Condos) | Notable 2025 Activity |
|---|---|---|
| Tribeca | $2,500-$3,000+ | Consistent ultra-luxury demand |
| West Village / Greenwich Village | $2,500-$3,000+ | $60M sale at 150 Charles St |
| Billionaires' Row (57th St corridor) | $3,000-$7,000+ | 4 of top 10 sales in 2025 |
| Hudson Yards / Chelsea | $2,000-$2,500 | New development interest |
| Upper East Side | ~$1,573 (CityRealty avg) | Strong new development pipeline |
| Financial District | $1,500-$2,000 | Major conversion activity |
| Upper West Side | $1,500-$2,000 | 50 W 66th St sale at $6,738/sq ft |
| Midtown | $1,500-$2,500 | Branded residences driving premiums |
Sources: CityRealty neighborhood data; PropertyShark 2025 top sales; Miller Samuel/Douglas Elliman reports; individual brokerage market reports.
The average price per square foot for all Manhattan condos was $2,099 in Q4 2025, according to Miller Samuel, essentially matching the all-time high set in 2017. Condo pricing has now recovered to pre-pandemic and pre-tax-reform levels.
Manhattan’s closing costs are among the highest in the nation, driven by multiple layers of city and state taxes. Buyers and sellers should budget accordingly.
| Tax/Fee | Rate | Paid By |
|---|---|---|
| NYS Mansion Tax (with NYC Supplemental) | 1% ($1M) to 3.9% ($25M+) | Buyer |
| Mortgage Recording Tax | 1.8% (loans < $500K); 1.925% (loans $500K+) | Buyer |
| Title Insurance | ~0.4% to 0.5% of sale price | Buyer |
| Attorney Fees | $2,500 – $5,000+ per transaction | Buyer |
Note: Lenders typically pay 0.25% of the Mortgage Recording Tax, slightly lowering the buyer’s effective rate.
| Tax/Fee | Rate | Paid By |
|---|---|---|
| NYS Transfer Tax | 0.4% (under $3M); 0.65% ($3M+) | Seller |
| NYC Transfer Tax (RPTT) | 1% (under $500K); 1.425% ($500K+) | Seller |
| Broker Commission | Negotiable | Seller |
The New York State mansion tax, originally enacted in 1989 as a flat 1% levy on purchases of $1 million or more, was expanded in 2019 to include a supplemental tax for New York City. This creates a progressive structure reaching up to 3.9% for properties priced at $25 million and above. Adjusted for inflation, the $1 million threshold would be approximately $2,600,000 in 2025 dollars. Because the floor has never been raised, the tax now affects the median Manhattan buyer.
Combined city and state transfer taxes generated $1.330 billion in NYC fiscal year 2025, with the FY2026 budget estimating $1.334 billion.
Key Takeaway: Manhattan buyers face closing costs that can total 2% to 6% of the purchase price, depending on the property value and financing structure. The mansion tax alone adds 1% to 3.9% on any purchase at $1 million or above.
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This statistics resource page was compiled by Avenue Law Firm from official city, state, and federal data sources, supplemented by market reports from leading appraisers and brokerages. All statistics have been verified against multiple sources where possible, with discrepancies noted in the text.
Peter Zinkovetsky, founding attorney of Avenue Law Firm, represents buyers and sellers of condominiums, townhomes, brownstones, and houses throughout Manhattan and the greater New York City area. The firm handles residential closings, commercial transactions, title review, and contract negotiation.
If you are buying or selling property in Manhattan, Peter Zinkovetsky at Avenue Law Firm is available for a free consultation. Call (212) 729-4090 today.
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The overall median sale price (combining condos, co-ops, and townhomes) was $1,125,000 to $1,180,000 in the second half of 2025, depending on the quarter and data source. Condos carry a significantly higher median of approximately $1.65 million. Townhomes occupy the luxury tier with a median typically ranging between $4.5 million and $5.5 million, though average townhome prices often approach $10 million due to ultra-luxury mega-mansion sales.
In 2025, 64% of all Manhattan residential sales were all-cash purchases, the highest share ever recorded. For properties above $3 million, that figure reaches approximately 90%.
Properties spent an average of 103 to 116 days on the market in 2025, depending on the quarter. Luxury properties and competitively priced units often sold in 30 to 60 days, while overpriced inventory lingered beyond 135 days. Sellers achieved approximately 96.9% of their last asking price.
Approximately 3,200 new condo units are projected for delivery through 2027. However, office-to-residential conversions are adding significant rental supply, with 5.0 million square feet of conversions started in 2025 and another 9.5 million square feet planned for 2026.
The mansion tax is a progressive New York State buyer closing cost that applies to residential purchases of $1 million or more. Rates start at a flat 1% for properties at exactly $1 million and increase up to 3.9% for properties at or above $25 million in New York City. The tax is paid at closing.
Total buyer closing costs typically range from 2% to 6% of the purchase price, but this depends heavily on property type. Condo and townhome buyers who finance must pay a mortgage recording tax (1.8% to 1.925%) and traditional title insurance. Co-op buyers are exempt from the mortgage recording tax and pay for a much cheaper form of co-op leasehold insurance instead of standard title insurance, saving them thousands of dollars. All buyers spending $1 million or more must pay the state mansion tax (1% to 3.9%). In a standard resale, sellers pay the NYC and NYS transfer taxes, which total roughly 1.4% to 2.075%. However, if you are buying a brand new condo from a developer, expect to pay those transfer taxes yourself.
Multiple analysts characterize Manhattan as a balanced market tilting slightly toward sellers. Inventory remains below historical averages, homes are selling faster than in 2023 to 2024, and sale-to-list price ratios hover near 97%. However, bidding wars remain uncommon outside trophy buildings and newly listed prime properties.