neighborhoods
Every Neighborhood. Every Borough. Real Data.
Market data for 150 neighborhoods across Queens, Brooklyn, and the Bronx — sourced from NYC Department of Finance public records, not MLS estimates. Median home prices by property type, seasonal sales trends, housing stock breakdowns, and expert seller guidance. Updated quarterly.
Queens
56 NeighborhoodsQueens has the most diverse housing stock in the outer boroughs — single-family and two-family homes dominate in neighborhoods like Bayside, Jamaica Estates, and Douglaston, while co-op corridors run through Forest Hills, Rego Park, and Jackson Heights. Long Island City is the borough's condo hub, with new development reshaping prices on the western waterfront.
See full Queens market report with neighborhood rankings →
Brooklyn
50 NeighborhoodsBrooklyn has the most diverse real estate market in NYC's outer boroughs — brownstone-lined neighborhoods like Park Slope and Bedford-Stuyvesant sit alongside condo towers in Downtown Brooklyn and Williamsburg, co-op complexes in Sheepshead Bay and Brighton Beach, and single-family enclaves in Marine Park and Mill Basin. Prices vary more block-to-block here than in any other borough.
See full Brooklyn market report with neighborhood rankings →
Bronx
44 NeighborhoodsThe Bronx is the most multifamily-heavy borough in the outer boroughs — two-family and three-family homes make up a large share of sales in most neighborhoods, with co-op apartments concentrated in areas like Parkchester and Pelham Parkway. Fieldston and Riverdale anchor the high end with large single-family properties, while emerging markets in Mott Haven and Longwood are drawing new attention.
See full Bronx market report with neighborhood rankings →
Municipal Records, Not Estimates
Every neighborhood page on this site is built from the NYC Department of Finance Rolling Sales Data — the official public record of every legally recorded property sale in New York City. This isn't MLS data, and it isn't an algorithm's estimate. It's what actually sold, for how much, and when.
Sites like Zillow and StreetEasy only capture listings that go through their platforms, missing FSBO sales, off-market deals, and transfers that never hit the MLS. The DOF dataset includes all of them. We also remove bulk portfolio transfers, nominal sales, and non-arms-length transactions that would distort median prices — cleaning that most data sources don't do.
Data updated quarterly when new NYC Department of Finance rolling sales files are published. Each neighborhood page shows the specific date range and sale count for its data.
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