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NYC Rents Hit Highest Level In History While Mamdani Moves Forward With Freeze

Median monthly rent in Manhattan has climbed to a record $5,295.

Blake Schaper
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NYC Rents Hit Highest Level In History While Mamdani Moves Forward With Freeze

New York City’s boroughs have hit record-high market rents as Mayor Zohran Mamdani moves forward with a policy to freeze rents for roughly two million residents. 

Gary Malin, chief operating officer of real estate brokerage Corcoran Group, said Manhattan and Brooklyn posted record median monthly rents of $5,295 and $4,350, respectively. 

Across the board, quality apartments are commanding a premium, and renters have little room to negotiate,” Malin said, attributing the high prices to decades of supply and demand mismatches.

The record highs come after Mamdani announced that rents for one million rent-stabilized apartments will be frozen in the coming year, directly affecting roughly two million residents, following a 7-1 vote by the Rent Guidelines Board.

Arpit Gupta, the lone dissenting member of the Rent Guidelines Board and an associate professor of finance at NYU Stern, called Mamdani’s rent freeze “troubling,” warning that rising costs combined with the price ceiling would force landlords to reduce apartment quality and worsen the city’s housing crisis.

“Freezing [rent-stabilized buildings’] rents while their expenses remain uncapped is therefore a threat to their long-term financial viability,” Gupta said Friday. “Residents might continue to enjoy low rents, but at the cost of being trapped in units that no longer fit their needs, and with few alternatives and steadily deteriorating conditions.”

Landlords have been preparing for a rent freeze since Mamdani made housing affordability and rent freezes a centerpiece of his campaign.

The rent freeze approval came after landlord representative Christina Smyth resigned from the Rent Guidelines Board before the vote, arguing the outcome had been predetermined. Landlord groups have said they are considering legal action to challenge the rent freeze. 

Although the freeze applies only to rent-stabilized apartments, critics argue it could place additional pressure on New York City’s market-rate housing.

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