Sara Alessi
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One-, two- and three-bedroom rentals are available across Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens for a monthly budget of $4,500. Bonus: Many of the apartments have in-unit washers and dryers.
Ready to rent? Check out our How To Rent Guide ...and if the apartment you like requires a guarantor that you don't have, see if the landlord accepts Insurent, a guarantor solution from one of BrickUnderground's sponsors.
You're mostly looking at studios and one-bedroom co-ops in Manhattan and Brooklyn if you’re armed with a budget of $450,000. In Queens, the Bronx and Staten Island, though, you’ll find some pretty large houses, including one with six bedrooms.
Whether you're renting for the long or short term, there's plenty to choose from in Manhattan and Brooklyn.
Ready to rent? Check out our How To Rent Guide ...and if the apartment you like requires a guarantor that you don't have, see if the landlord accepts Insurent, a guarantor solution from one of BrickUnderground's sponsors.
While $350,000 isn’t the biggest budget to be armed with for this NYC real estate market, there are quite a few Manhattan and Brooklyn studios for anyone who’s just starting out on their own, or doesn’t need much space. Queens offers more space—no surprise—and there’s even an investment-only property in Staten Island that could yield over $36,000 a year.
You can afford a space as large as a four-bedroom apartment in Brooklyn on a rental budget of $5,000 a month. But there are also studios, one-, two- and three-bedroom apartments in Manhattan.
For those armed with a $600,000 budget, studios, one-, two- and three-bedroom apartments are available across Manhattan and Brooklyn this week; there are even some houses in Queens, the Bronx and Staten Island.