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Manhattan median rent soars to ‘all-time high’ of $5,000 — experts warn it will only get worse

Manhattan’s median rent has skyrocketed to an “all-time high” of $5,000, and experts warned Mayor Mamdani’s vow to “freeze the rent” will only make matters worse. 

The sobering milestone, reached in February, marks a 6% increase from the previous year, according to reports by The Corcoran Group and Rent Hop.

“Manhattan’s rental market has become more challenging than ever for home seekers,” Corcoran’s Chief Operating Officer Gary Malin said.

The median rent in Manhattan has reached $5,000, according to reports from Corcoran and Rent Hop. Helayne Seidman for the NY Post

“Meanwhile, inventory is at the tightest level we’ve seen in nearly four years.”

A combination of inflation and legislation — including bills which were supposed to help tenants, such as New York City’s divisive FARE and the state’s Housing Stability and Protection acts — have contributed to the problem, realtors told The Post.

And there’s no relief in sight, they warned.

With just a 2% vacancy rate, the rental market is essentially gridlocked. 

Gary Malin, the chief operating officer of The Corcoran Group, said it is a difficult time for home seekers in Manhattan. Corcoran Group

Corcoran reported 5,290 active listings across Manhattan in February, which is 26% fewer than the same period a year earlier.

“Nothing’s going to pop up, and the prices will keep increasing over time – they’re not decreasing,” Manhattan Group Realtor Jordan St. John said. “Everything in the world is getting more expensive.”

Rent increases continue to outpace inflation, according to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics.

In February, rental rates in New York, Newark and Jersey City increased by 3.7% since the previous year. Meanwhile, the Consumer Price Index for the same areas only rose by 3.2% during the same period.

Jordan St. John, a broker at Manhattan Realty Group, said rent prices will only go up. Manhattan Realty Group
Mamdani’s pledge to “freeze the rent” will only make matters worse, according to realtors and property owners. Michael Nigro

“Two years ago, renters could get a ‘flex-two,’ which is where you get a one bedroom, you put a wall up to make the rent cheaper . . . for like $4,000 a month. Now you need to pay like $5,000 at least,” St. John said.

The Fairness in Apartment Rental Expenses law requires whoever hired a broker to pay the fee, instead of the tenant automatically fronting the cost. But instead of helping tenants, the FARE act “made landlords bake this fee into rent, which now has raised the price of rent,” she said.

A “two-flex” is a one-bedroom apartment made into a two-bedroom with a fake wall. Sidnye Unger lives in a two-flex in the Financial District. Courtesy of Sidnye Unger

This unprecedented rent spike has been years in the making and also stems from the Housing Stability and Protection Act, which placed strict limitations on landlords and barred them from implementing vacancy bonuses.

The increases would jack up rent on stabilized apartments by 20% for new tenants and made preferential rents — or rates lower than legally mandated — permanent.

“What’s happened is because owners can’t really liberate those apartments and make a decent return on them, a lot of those apartments obviously do not hit the open market,” Malin explained. 

“So there’s this inventory of listings that could be available that are not because the owner can’t afford to renovate them, bring them up to code and make any return on his or her investment.”

Rents may continue to climb even higher under the socialist mayor, who supports a rent freeze on the approximately one million stabilized units across the city. 

St. John said her clients are having more difficulty than ever finding places in their price ranges. Christopher Sadowski

“How do you think [landlords] are going to make up for that shortfall?” Malin said. “They’re gonna charge the free market tenants more money.

“You start to realize that while people might have gone into all these policies with the best of intentions to help solve a problem, the results tell you that they haven’t worked.”

Adding yet another layer to the crisis, more than 80% of households earn less than the standard “40-times the rent” NYC landlords require, according to Rent Hop analyst Rohan Sinha.

“With that restriction, a lot of people are getting weeded out,” Sinha said. 

Tyler Chiu, 26, is one of the people being “weeded out” in the competitive market. He cannot afford to move to Manhattan to be near his job. Courtesy of Tyler Chiu

While Corcoran and Rent Hop both reported that the median reached $5,000, StreetEasy estimated the February median was $4,700, a hike of 6.9% from last year. Each uses their own data to come up with their figures.

Tyler Chiu is a 26-year-old radiation therapist still living with his parents on Staten Island — and might be there for the foreseeable future.

“It’s too expensive to move out. It’s really ridiculous,” Chiu, who works in Manhattan, said. 

Sidnye Unger, 26, has lived in the Financial District for about three years and is afraid for when her lease is up. Courtesy of Sidnye Unger

Manhattan renters are dreading the end of their leases.

“I am lucky to have a roommate. With rent going up, I don’t foresee myself not having a roommate,” said Sidnye Unger, 26, who lives in a “flex-two” in the Financial District. “I’m trying to mentally prepare for when my lease is up in August.”

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