NYC Buyer Guide

432 Park Avenue NYC | Billionaires Row Condos 2026

Manhattan’s luxury condominium market is concentrated in four corridors — Billionaires’ Row, the Upper East Side, Tribeca, and Chelsea / Hudson Yards. Reference assets include 220 Central Park South, Central Park Tower, 432 Park Avenue, and 56 Leonard. We work one buyer at a time — selecting markets, diligencing buildings, and coordinating tax-aware structures for U.S. and international purchasers.

What defines a luxury condo in NYC?

Luxury condos in Manhattan represent the top tier of the city’s residential market — typically beginning around $4M and averaging approximately $3,000 per square foot as of 2026. Quality and pricing are driven by four factors: building design, services, finishes, and location.

The category spans white-glove pre-war addresses on the Upper East Side, Tribeca full-floor lofts, supertall towers along the 57th Street corridor, and new construction in Chelsea and Hudson Yards. Pricing tightens above $3,500/SF for “special” residences and climbs past $4,500/SF in trophy buildings.

NYC luxury condo market snapshot — 2026

  • Entry luxury threshold: ~$4,000,000
  • Average price / SF: ~$3,000
  • “Special” residences: $3,500+ / SF
  • Ultra-luxury buildings: $4,500+ / SF
  • Trophy tier: $20,000,000+
  • Top neighborhoods: Tribeca · UES · Billionaires’ Row · Chelsea/Hudson Yards · West Village
  • Cash closings: ~70%

Our portfolio — Manhattan luxury condominiums

A representative selection of the buildings we work in. Browse each address for layouts, sponsor history, common charges, tax abatement status, and current availability.

View all Manhattan luxury condo buildings →

NYC luxury condo pricing — how the market segments

The luxury condo market in Manhattan stratifies into four discrete pricing tiers, each with its own buyer profile, building characteristics, and absorption pattern.

TierPrice / SFProfile
Entry luxury$1,800–$2,500Boutique buildings, secondary blocks, smaller units in major addresses.
Core luxury$2,500–$3,500Most of the active market — quality new construction and recent resales in prime micro-locations.
“Special”$3,500–$4,500Premium layouts, views, line, or floor. Often a specific apartment, not a building average.
Ultra-luxury / trophy$4,500–$10,000+Supertall towers, central-park-facing residences, the most discreet branded addresses.

NYC luxury condo pricing by submarket — 2026

NeighborhoodAvg $/SFTrophy tier
Billionaires’ Row (W 57 corridor)$4,500–$6,500$10,000+
Central Park South / 220 CPS$6,000–$8,000$10,000+
Tribeca$2,800–$3,800$5,500+
Upper East Side (Park / 5th)$2,500–$3,500$5,000+
Hudson Yards / Chelsea$2,400–$3,300$5,000+
West Village$2,800–$3,800$5,500+
SoHo / NoHo$2,400–$3,200$4,500+
Midtown East / Sutton$1,800–$2,400$3,500+

Ranges reflect 2026 Q1–Q2 transactions in buildings $4M+. Trophy tier is the top 5% of closings by $/SF.

A tax-aware framework for NYC luxury condos

Headline price per square foot is the starting point, not the conclusion. The right underwriting question is cost of ownership after tax, which turns on five variables:

  1. 421-a or other abatement status — abated buildings often run 70–90% lower property tax during the abatement period, materially shifting NPV.
  2. Mansion tax & transfer tax — NY State mansion tax rises in tiers from 1% (at $1M) to 3.9% (at $25M+). Plan acquisition cost accordingly.
  3. SALT cap exposure — the $10,000 federal SALT cap limits deductibility of NY state, city, and property taxes; this disproportionately affects ultra-luxury owners.
  4. Common charges & assessments — full-service luxury buildings run $1.50–$3.50/SF/month in common charges. Branded residences sit at the top of that range.
  5. Foreign buyer structure — LLC ownership, FIRPTA withholding (15% at sale), estate tax exposure for non-resident aliens, and treaty positioning all alter the after-tax math.

Every engagement runs these five variables before a price is discussed.

Quick answer — key takeaways

  • Manhattan luxury condos begin near $4M and average ~$3,000/SF in 2026.
  • Four concentrated corridors: Billionaires’ Row, UES, Tribeca, Chelsea/Hudson Yards.
  • Trophy tier sits at $4,500+/SF; supertalls and 220 CPS exceed $7,000/SF on resale.
  • ~70% of luxury closings are cash; financing is available but not the default.
  • Tax structure (abatement, mansion tax, foreign-buyer overlay) routinely moves after-tax cost by 15–25%.
  • Condos — not co-ops — dominate new luxury inventory and accommodate international ownership.

Why Manhattan Miami

Market selection

We map your objectives (use, hold period, liquidity, tax posture) against current submarket micro-pricing — before any showing.

Building-level diligence

Offering plan, financial statements, reserves, sponsor history, litigation, sublet policy, lot-line risk, abatement runway. Building by building.

Tax-aware & foreign-buyer advisory

Coordination with your attorney and tax advisor on LLC structure, FIRPTA, estate exposure, and cross-border closing mechanics.

Your NYC luxury condo advisor

Tell us what you’re considering. We typically reply within one business day.

Private advisory — by invitation

For confidential representation on a specific building, off-market opportunity, or cross-border purchase, reach the desk directly.

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More questions buyers ask

What neighborhoods have the best luxury condos in NYC?

Manhattan's top luxury condo neighborhoods include Billionaires' Row (the 57th Street corridor), Tribeca (full-floor lofts and boutique buildings), the Upper East Side (traditional full-service white-glove buildings), the West Village (limited new development with premium pricing), and Chelsea / Hudson Yards (new construction with the most modern amenities).

What is the price range for luxury condos in NYC?

NYC luxury condos start around $4M in prime neighborhoods and scale to $250M+ for the most trophy penthouses. The typical range for a 2–3 bedroom luxury condo in a desirable Manhattan neighborhood runs $4M–$15M, with ultra-luxury full-floor units at $20M–$80M and above.

What amenities should I expect in a NYC luxury condo building?

Top NYC luxury condo buildings typically offer 24-hour doorman and concierge, valet parking, resident-only fitness centers and pools, private dining and catering kitchens, children's playrooms, pet spas, rooftop terraces, storage, and in branded residences on-site hotel-style services.

How do condos differ from co-ops in NYC?

Condos give buyers direct title to their unit and are far more flexible for financing, subletting, and international ownership. Co-ops involve buying shares in a corporation and require board approval. Condos generally have higher purchase prices but lower monthly maintenance, and are more liquid for resale and rental. Nearly all new luxury buildings are condos.

Can international buyers purchase luxury condos in NYC?

Yes. New York City condos have no citizenship or residency restrictions. International buyers can hold title individually, through an LLC, or through a foreign corporation. Many luxury condo buildings were developed with international buyers in mind and facilitate closing through international wire transfers and ITIN-based transactions.

Do I need a real estate attorney in NYC?

Yes — unlike many US states, New York real estate transactions require attorneys on both sides. Your attorney reviews the contract of sale, the building's offering plan or financial statements, and handles the closing. Legal fees typically run $3,000–$6,000.

What is a 421-a abatement and should it matter to me?

421-a is a New York City tax incentive that phases in property taxes for newly constructed residential buildings over periods ranging from 10 to 25 years. During the abatement period, annual property taxes can be 70–90% lower than the fully assessed rate. For a luxury condo, this can represent $30,000–$100,000+ in annual savings.

What are common charges in a Manhattan condo?

Common charges cover building staff, amenities, insurance, maintenance, and reserves. In a full-service luxury building, expect $1.50–$3.50 per square foot per month. A 1,500 SF two-bedroom in a white-glove building might carry $2,500–$5,000/month in common charges alone, before real estate taxes.

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