Manhattan Buyers Shun Fixer-Uppers
As prices of newly renovated apartments skyrocket, the market for unrenovated units has stagnated. The latest trend to emerge from the pandemic is a preference for renovated homes over budget-friendly fixer-uppers among Manhattan buyers, a new report indicates.
Manhattan buyers shun fixer-uppers— As prices of newly renovated apartments skyrocket, the market for unrenovated units has stagnated. The latest trend to emerge from the pandemic is a preference for renovated homes over budget-friendly fixer-uppers among Manhattan buyers, a new report indicates. Real estate data firm UrbanDigs found that the gap in sales prices between fresh-faced apartments and those requiring work has widened by nearly 30 percent in the last year, the second-largest such divide in a decade.
As demand for units in mint, move-in condition pushed prices to new highs — up nearly 14 percent to $1.25 million from a pandemic low of $1.1 million — sales prices for unrenovated apartments, such as estate sale units, have stagnated. During the same period, the cost of a fixer-upper rose just over 1 percent.
NYT: Manhattan Apartment Sales Surge to Three-Decade High
One benefit to reading The Lanyard Team’s newsletter each month is the ‘heard it here first’ factor. In this case, the NYT echoes the sentiment of our most recent newsletter. More apartments were sold in Manhattan in the third quarter than at any other time in the last 32 years, in the latest sign that New York City real estate is set for a faster-than-expected recovery, according to new market reports.
There were 4,523 closed sales of co-ops and condos in Manhattan in the third quarter, exceeding the record set in the middle of 2007, when 3,939 sales were recorded. The quarter ended with more than three times as many sales as in the same period in 2020, when the market was largely locked down because of the coronavirus, and with 76.5 percent more sales than the same time in 2019, before the pandemic. This is largely a result of pent up demand.
One benefit to reading The Lanyard Team’s newsletter each month is the ‘heard it here first’ factor. In this case, the NYT echoes the sentiment of our most recent newsletter. More apartments were sold in Manhattan in the third quarter than at any other time in the last 32 years, in the latest sign that New York City real estate is set for a faster-than-expected recovery, according to new market reports.
There were 4,523 closed sales of co-ops and condos in Manhattan in the third quarter, exceeding the record set in the middle of 2007, when 3,939 sales were recorded. The quarter ended with more than three times as many sales as in the same period in 2020, when the market was largely locked down because of the coronavirus, and with 76.5 percent more sales than the same time in 2019, before the pandemic. This is largely a result of pent up demand.