Median rents in Dumbo slipped 8.2% year-over-year



Although this neighborhood has been known for sky-high rents and scarce availability, Dumbo is now delivering a rare note of relief in New York City’s otherwise pricey rental chorus.

As of August, the waterfront Brooklyn enclave saw its median asking rent fall 8.2% year-over-year — marking one of the steepest drops among high-inventory neighborhoods across the five boroughs, according to a recent StreetEasy analysis.

The dip stands in contrast to much of the city, where rental inventory remains tight and asking prices have stayed stubbornly high.

The falling rents in Dumbo represent the largest drop among high-inventory neighborhoods across New York City, according to the latest StreetEasy study. Oleh Bereza – stock.adobe.com

The shift in Dumbo is being driven in part by an influx of new construction. 

This year, 90% of all rentals in the neighborhood were in buildings constructed since 2010, and rental listings were up 3% compared to the previous August. 

Landlords have responded by offering sweeter deals: 57% of all Dumbo listings this year came with at least one month of free rent as a concession.

“New developments have been capturing a larger share of rentals across the city amid low vacancy rates in existing rental buildings,” Kenny Lee, StreetEasy’s senior economist, told The Post. 

This decline is largely driven by a surge in new development activity along the Brooklyn waterfront. Renata – stock.adobe.com

“Recent developments have been concentrated in the Brooklyn waterfront and Queens. As new developments continue to grow their market share, property managers have been offering their units at more competitive prices.”

But it’s not just new buildings at play. 

Frances Katzen, a luxury broker at Douglas Elliman, points to a broader convergence of factors reshaping the neighborhood’s rental dynamic. 

“It’s being driven by several converging factors including new supply, softening demand at very high price points, lifestyle shifts and broader macroeconomic pressures including cost of living and interest rates,” she said. “Historically, Dumbo has been one of the most desirable and highest-rent neighborhoods in Brooklyn, so while the year-over-year declines may look significant in percentage terms, rents remain at a premium compared to most of the borough.”

That is, indeed, true. The median asking rent in Dumbo is $5,600 per month, according to StreetEasy.

Kenny Lee, StreetEasy’s senior economist, told The Post: “New developments have been capturing a larger share of rentals across the city amid low vacancy rates in existing rental buildings.” Pavel Bendov for Olympia DUMBO
Dumbo stands out as one of the neighborhoods with the highest share of new rental buildings — 90% of rentals this year were in buildings constructed since 2010 — and rental inventory in the area was up 3% compared to the previous year. Pavel Bendov for Olympia DUMBO

Katzen also notes that Dumbo’s shifting role in Brooklyn’s cultural and residential ecosystem is playing a part.

“As more neighborhoods across Brooklyn gentrify and offer attractive new options, demand naturally redistributes,” she said. “With more inventory and more choice, renters are exploring emerging areas, while Dumbo increasingly attracts end users — buyers rather than renters. That shift leaves a smaller pool of rental demand, contributing to the downward pressure on rates.”

To attract tenants in this increasingly competitive landscape, 57% of Dumbo listings this year offered at least one month of free rent. Yuriy T – stock.adobe.com
While average asking rents still hover around $4,100-$5,300 for studios and $7,000-plus for two-bedrooms, the shift signals growing opportunity for renters as supply expands and landlords lean into concessions. James – stock.adobe.com

Elsewhere in the city, a few other neighborhoods are also seeing rents soften.

Downtown Brooklyn posted a 5.2% year-over-year decline in median asking rent, while Long Island City was down 3.7%, and Astoria and Williamsburg saw more modest drops. In each case, expanding supply and tenant fatigue at premium price points are rebalancing once-sizzling rental markets.

Credit to Nypost AND Peoples

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