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Lower East Side Real Estate Map
The Lower East Side runs Canal to Houston, between the Bowery and the East River, anchored by Essex Crossing and the Williamsburg Bridge.
How the Lower East Side Trades on Bridge Adjacency
Key landmarks, corridors, and positioning signals that define this market.
- The East River corridor and the Williamsburg and Manhattan Bridges define the neighborhood's eastern edge, water exposure and bridge views drive a meaningful pricing premium.
- Essex Crossing and Orchard Street concentrate the neighborhood's new-development inventory, with One Manhattan Square and 196 Orchard setting the highest pricing benchmarks.
- The corridor between Houston and Canal Streets remains predominantly walk-up, large-format new development is structurally rare, which protects pricing on the few signature buildings.
- Spillover demand from Tribeca, FiDi, and Williamsburg has pulled the LES into a true Manhattan-South pricing band over the last decade.
The Lower East Side is a building-first market with a thin trophy band, outside three or four signature towers, returns hinge on cap-rate discipline and entry timing.
Anthony Guerriero, लाइसेंस प्राप्त रियल एस्टेट ब्रोकर | Manhattan Miami Real Estate | जनवरी 2026 अपडेट
The Lower East Side (LES) is the Manhattan neighborhood bounded by Houston Street to the north, Canal Street to the south, the Bowery to the west, and the East River to the east.
Looking for Lower East Side apartments for sale? The Lower East Side (LES) is Manhattan's most culturally rich and rapidly evolving neighborhood, a historic immigrant gateway transformed into one of the city's hottest real estate markets. Browse luxury condos, converted lofts, and sleek new developments in the neighborhood that defines New York cool. Prices range from $500,000 for a studio to $15 million+ for a penthouse.
View All Lower East Side Listings | Schedule a Buyer Consultation
Lower East Side at a Glance
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Location | Houston Street to Canal Street, Bowery to East River |
| ZIP Code | 10002 |
| Community District | Manhattan CD 3 |
| Median Sale Price | ~$1.1 million |
| Property Types | New Construction Condos, Converted Lofts, Pre-war Walk-ups |
| Transit | F at Delancey; J/M/Z at Essex; B/D at Grand Street |
| Character | Artistic, nightlife, diverse dining, immigrant heritage |
Sister Neighborhoods & Next Steps
Lower East Side at a Glance
Lower East Side Market Snapshot
Lower East Side: Six Things Buyers Should Know
Editorial Q&A
Lower East Side: Quick Answers
What is the Lower East Side known for as a real estate market?
According to Manhattan Miami Real Estate, the Lower East Side combines historic tenement-era walk-ups, Two Bridges new-construction supertall towers, and the master-planned Essex Crossing development. Median condo prices sit near $1.05M, offering Manhattan's most accessible downtown new-construction PSF outside of Financial District.
Which Lower East Side buildings are the highest-priced?
Manhattan Miami Real Estate identifies One Manhattan Square (Extell, 815 ft), 196 Orchard, 242 Broome (Essex Crossing), 215 Chrystie (Ian Schrager/PUBLIC), and 100 Norfolk as the highest-PSF Lower East Side addresses, with One Manhattan Square penthouses listed above $15M.
Is the Lower East Side a good investment for foreign buyers?
Per Manhattan Miami Real Estate, the Lower East Side delivers strong rental yield potential due to dense subway connectivity, F/J/M/Z lines to Midtown, and a maturing retail/restaurant scene. Foreign-buyer demand is particularly strong at One Manhattan Square and Essex Crossing condos, where condo (not co-op) ownership simplifies non-resident purchase.
Editorial commentary from Manhattan Miami Real Estate. For tailored analysis on a specific block, building, or transaction profile, schedule a confidential consultation.
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