carroll-gardens-brooklyn
Selling Your Home in Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn
Current market data from 137 recorded property transactions in Carroll Gardens. Every number on this page comes from NYC Department of Finance public records — not estimates, not algorithms, not listing data. This is what actually sold.
Home Prices in Carroll Gardens
Median sale prices by property type, based on every recorded sale in Carroll Gardens over the past 12 months.
Quarterly Trends by Property Type
Median sale price by quarter. Arrows show change vs. the prior quarter.
📊 Why this data is more reliable than other sites
The numbers on this page come from the NYC Department of Finance public records — every legally recorded property sale in Carroll Gardens, not just MLS-listed transactions. 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. This 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. The result is a more accurate picture of what individual homes are actually selling for in your market.
Data source: NYC Department of Finance, Rolling Sales Data — Brooklyn. Period: April 2025 – March 2026. Excludes $0 transfers, nominal sales, non-arms-length transactions, and bulk portfolio transfers identified through same-date/same-price pattern analysis. Last updated: May 2026.
Best Time to Sell in Carroll Gardens
Monthly closing volume based on 137 residential sales recorded by the NYC Department of Finance over the past 12 months. Months highlighted in orange indicate above-average demand (≥110% of the average monthly volume).
Takeaway for Sellers
Carroll Gardens sees its strongest closing activity in March, April, May, July, September, and December — the months highlighted in orange above. These peaks indicate when buyer demand is highest and the most transactions close.
Since the typical sale takes 3 months from listing to closing you should be listing approximately 3 months before these peak windows to position your home when competition among buyers is strongest.
The optimal listing date depends on your property type, your timeline, and current inventory levels. A strategy session can pinpoint the right window for your specific home.
Housing Stock in Carroll Gardens
Distribution of 137 residential sales by property type over the past 12 months.
What This Means for Sellers
Carroll Gardens has a heavy condo market — 46.0% of recent sales. Condo buyers tend to be more flexible than co-op buyers because there's no board approval process, but they're also more price-sensitive because they have more options. Building amenities, monthly common charges, and unit-level renovations significantly affect sale price. Marketing needs to highlight what makes the building and the unit competitive within the local condo set.
FAQ: Selling in Carroll Gardens
Based on the most recent NYC Department of Finance public records (April 2025 – March 2026), median sale prices in Carroll Gardens vary significantly by property type. Co-op Apartments: $1.2M (12 sales). Single-Family Homes: $6.6M (4 sales). Condominiums: $1.9M (63 sales). Two-Family Homes: $2.9M (15 sales). Three-Family Homes: $3.6M (20 sales). These figures reflect all legally recorded sales — not just MLS listings — giving a more complete picture than sites like Zillow or StreetEasy.
The Carroll Gardens market recorded 137 residential sales over the past 12 months according to NYC public records. The median price per square foot is $1177. The median building was built in 1910. For a detailed analysis of how current conditions affect your home's value, schedule a free strategy call.
Carroll Gardens sees its strongest closing volume in March, April, May, July, September, and December, indicating above-average buyer demand. Since the typical sale takes about 3 months from listing to closing, you should be listing approximately 3 months before these peak windows to position your home when competition among buyers is strongest. The optimal listing date depends on your property type and personal timeline — a strategy call can help you find the right window.
Carroll Gardens has a diverse housing stock. Over the past 12 months, Condominiums accounted for 46.0% of sales, Other Residential accounted for 16.8% of sales, Three-Family Homes accounted for 14.6% of sales, Two-Family Homes accounted for 10.9% of sales, Co-op Apartments accounted for 8.8% of sales, Single-Family Homes accounted for 2.9% of sales. The median year built is 1910.
Across all neighborhoods Justin Braithwaite serves, his listings average just 24 days on market — well below the city average. His listings also close at 102.8% of asking price on average, meaning sellers typically get more than their list price. Results in Carroll Gardens specifically depend on property type, pricing strategy, and market timing.
You're not legally required to use an agent, but the data strongly suggests it pays to have expert representation. Justin Braithwaite has completed 261 seller transactions with a 96.1% close rate and a 102.8% sale-to-list ratio. His clients benefit from pricing strategy informed by the same NYC Department of Finance data on this page, plus 10 years of real estate experience and 27 years of sales and marketing expertise. Schedule a free strategy call to see how a data-driven approach can maximize your sale price in Carroll Gardens.
Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn at a Glance
Carroll Gardens is a residential neighborhood in northwestern Brooklyn, bordered by Degraw Street to the north, the Gowanus Canal to the east, Hamilton Avenue to the south, and the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway to the west. The neighborhood is distinguished by deep front gardens — a defining feature dating from a 19th-century surveyor's plan that set houses back from the street — and by a housing stock dominated by Italianate brownstone row homes. Smith Street and Court Street serve as the main commercial corridors.
Carroll Gardens is served by the F and G subway lines at the Carroll Street and Smith–9th Streets stations. The neighborhood was historically a tight-knit Italian-American community and retains a strong residential character, though its real estate market has been among the most expensive in Brooklyn for decades. Family-sized brownstones and a low-rise architectural scale define the area.
Nearby Neighborhoods
Thinking about other areas in the Brooklyn? Explore market data and insights for neighborhoods near Carroll Gardens.
Ready to Sell Your Carroll Gardens Home?
Get a personalized pricing strategy built on the same NYC public-records data you just saw on this page — not an algorithm's guess. Justin Braithwaite will walk you through what your home is worth today and when to list for maximum results.