Manhattan apartments see annual price decline for first time since 1996
A Prudential Douglas Elliman report released today depicts the spectacular rise of home prices over the past decade, but also the sudden -- and definitive -- arrival of the real estate slump in Manhattan. In 2009, Manhattan co-ops and condos saw year-over-year declines for the first time since 1996, the report shows. The average 2009 apartment sold for $1.39 million, down 12.5 percent from the previous year. The median price dropped 11 percent to $850,000 from 2008, while the average price per square foot sank 14.2 percent to $1,073. Other areas of the country have seen real estate activity and prices decline gradually over the past few years, but the Manhattan real estate market was still booming until the Lehman Brothers collapse in the fall of 2008. In fact, Manhattan prices set new records in 2008. That year, the average sale price of a Manhattan apartment reached a new ever high of $1.59 million, while the median was $955,000 and the price per square foot was $1,251, according to the report. Still, Manhattan real estate prices remain at dizzying heights compared to a decade ago.
Main Menu
Real Estate News
- Westchester affordable housing plan rejected by court monitor
- Freddie Mac: Mortgage interest rates fall below 5 percent for third week this year
- Nolitan hotel to go ahead with scheduled opening despite zoning violations, Ratner responds to safety concerns over Downtown Beekman Tower site ... and more
- Cuomo’s tenant-friendly settlement with Vantage raises questions
- By the numbers: China's real estate market surges while New York's struggles





