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View Full Version : New York takes back title as most expensive renters market: report



Teh One Who Knocks
08-25-2021, 12:20 PM
By Jesse O'Neill | New York Post


https://i.imgur.com/JMYpIPOh.jpg

New York City rents have overtaken San Francisco as the most expensive in the U.S., a sign the Big Apple is outpacing the West Coast tech hub’s financial recovery.

The median one-bedroom rental in the boroughs is now $2,810, compared to a midway price point of $2,800 in the Golden City, according to a new study by online rental platform Zumper.

It’s the first time New York has outpriced San Francisco since Zumper started tracking data in 2014, as many New Yorkers that fled the city amid COVID-19 concerns have returned, according to the study.
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"People returned to New York as indoor dining and other urban amenities that make the city popular became available again. Rent began to rise as a result … That hasn’t happened in San Francisco," according to the study.

Rent remains down by 20% in the Bay Area city compared to March 2020, whereas rent in the five boroughs is currently only off by about 1% from before the pandemic. In 2019, it cost $800 more to rent in "San Fran" than the Big Apple, Zumper said.

A middle-of-the-road one-bedroom apartment in Manhattan at the beginning of the pandemic cost about $3,417, according to StreetEasy. That figure plummeted to $2,700 as many left the city, creating the lowest rents there in more than a decade.

Renters in Brooklyn and Queens also saw rents slide by about 10% last year, according to the website, which does not keep track of prices in The Bronx and on Staten Island.

The average rental in Manhattan currently costs $4,009, according to a recent Douglas Elliman report, which notes last month saw the highest amount of lease signings for any year since 2008 in the borough.

Boston, San Jose and Washington, D.C., round out the nation’s top five priciest cities for renters, Zumper said.

Nationally, an average one-bedroom apartment costs about 9% more than it did this time last year, according to the study.

lost in melb.
08-25-2021, 12:35 PM
"The median one-bedroom rental in the boroughs"


Where are the boroughs? I assume we are talking inner city here

Teh One Who Knocks
08-25-2021, 12:46 PM
"The median one-bedroom rental in the boroughs"


Where are the boroughs? I assume we are talking inner city here

https://i.imgur.com/UjHxej7.png

Muddy
08-25-2021, 01:11 PM
How do people afford that? Do they make $50 an hour at these delis and shit they work at?

PorkChopSandwiches
08-25-2021, 04:07 PM
Manhattan smells like piss, so you pay a premium

Teh One Who Knocks
08-25-2021, 04:08 PM
Manhattan smells like piss, so you pay a premium

So shouldn't San Fran cost more because it smells like shit? :-k

Griffin
08-25-2021, 04:42 PM
:hand: San Francisco smells like Pelosi.

PorkChopSandwiches
08-25-2021, 04:43 PM
:hand: San Francisco smells like Pelosi.

You know what that smell is? Depends

Muddy
08-25-2021, 07:17 PM
:hand: San Francisco smells like Pelosi.

That's what he said..??

Godfather
08-26-2021, 04:29 AM
How do people afford that? Do they make $50 an hour at these delis and shit they work at?

Affordability is really the metric that interests me. Sure NY has highest rent, but from what I've read, it doesn't even crack top 10 of least affordable based on cost of living versus average income.

lost in melb.
08-26-2021, 04:52 AM
Affordability is really the metric that interests me. Sure NY has highest rent, but from what I've read, it doesn't even crack top 10 of least affordable based on cost of living versus average income.

Yep, try Hong Kong. And even some of the Australian cities.

They are parallel universes in their own bubbles.