Manhattan rental prices continue to soar, especially for high-end buildings

Manhattan
Apartment buildings in front of the One World Trade Center building in the West Village neighborhood. Photo credit Jeenah Moon/Bloomberg via Getty Images

NEW YORK (WCBS 880) -- Rent in Manhattan is continuing on a big upward trajectory, even as many employers are still not welcoming employees back to nearby offices.

Live On-Air
Ask Your Smart Speaker to Play W C B S Eight Eighty
WCBS Newsradio 880
Listen Now
Now Playing
Now Playing

According to the latest Elliman Report, the average rental price in Manhattan is up to $4,451, a 14.1% jump from a year ago and 3.2% up from just the previous month.

The jump comes in connection to buildings with doormen — as the median going price is up 18.3% from last year, versus just a 3.9% jump on buildings without a doorman. The report said the growth among higher-end buildings is the largest they’ve seen on record.

Manhattan’s West Side has seen the greatest jump, with a 19.4% rent price jump over the year, now up to $3,700, with Downtown not far behind at $4,021, a 15.1% increase.

Northern Manhattan’s median rents stayed almost exactly the same compared to a year ago, at about $2,200. On the east side, the media is $3,150, up 8.6% over the year.

The real estate report comes just a day after a Partnership for New York City report showed just 49% of Manhattan office workers are due to be back in-person by the end of January. The current level is 28%.

In October, an average of 8% of Manhattan office workers were in the office five days a week. By January, that number is expected to grow to 13%.

Meanwhile in Brooklyn, the big rise in prices has not been seen.

The average rental goes for $3,282, which is actually down a bit more than a half-percent from a year ago, despite a 22% spike in new rentals.

Where there has been movement is in Brooklyn studios, which have nearly doubled over a month period in new leases from a year ago. The cost has jumped 12.5% — while one to three bedroom rentals have only marginally gone up in price, or even dipped.

Featured Image Photo Credit: Jeenah Moon/Bloomberg via Getty Images