Why Pricing Your Manhattan Apartment Right the First Time Is Everything
Why Pricing Your Manhattan Apartment Right the First Time Is Everything
There is a moment in every listing when the market tells you the truth. The question is whether you listen to it on day one or learn it the hard way on day sixty.
I have priced hundreds of apartments in Manhattan over 27 years. The single biggest mistake sellers make is not greed. It is ego. They price for what they need, not what the market will bear. Those are two very different numbers.
What happens when you overprice.
The first two weeks of a listing are the most valuable real estate you have. That is when buyer interest peaks, when agents are actively showing, and when offers are most likely to come in at or above ask. When you overprice, you burn through that window chasing a number the market has already rejected.
Then comes the price reduction. And the moment you reduce, buyers start asking why. What is wrong with it? Why is nobody buying it? The stigma of a price cut is real and it costs you.
What the right price actually does.
A well-priced listing creates urgency. It attracts multiple buyers. It generates competing interest that sometimes pushes the final sale price above ask. I have seen correctly priced apartments in Manhattan sell for more than an overpriced version of the same unit would have achieved six months later.
Pricing is not about leaving money on the table. It is about creating the conditions where buyers compete for your apartment instead of walking past it.
What I look at when pricing.
Comparable sales in the building and on the block. Days on market for similar units. Current inventory and absorption rate. The specific features of your apartment that add or subtract value. And honestly, my gut after 27 years of watching this market move.
Numbers matter. But so does judgment.
If you are thinking about selling, the conversation about price needs to happen before you sign anything. Not after.
Let's talk.
4/28/2026
Why Pricing Your Manhattan Apartment Right the First Time Is Everything
There is a moment in every listing when the market tells you the truth. The question is whether you listen to it on day one or learn it the hard way on day sixty.
I have priced hundreds of apartments in Manhattan over 27 years. The single biggest mistake sellers make is not greed. It is ego. They price for what they need, not what the market will bear. Those are two very different numbers.
What happens when you overprice.
The first two weeks of a listing are the most valuable real estate you have. That is when buyer interest peaks, when agents are actively showing, and when offers are most likely to come in at or above ask. When you overprice, you burn through that window chasing a number the market has already rejected.
Then comes the price reduction. And the moment you reduce, buyers start asking why. What is wrong with it? Why is nobody buying it? The stigma of a price cut is real and it costs you.
What the right price actually does.
A well-priced listing creates urgency. It attracts multiple buyers. It generates competing interest that sometimes pushes the final sale price above ask. I have seen correctly priced apartments in Manhattan sell for more than an overpriced version of the same unit would have achieved six months later.
Pricing is not about leaving money on the table. It is about creating the conditions where buyers compete for your apartment instead of walking past it.
What I look at when pricing.
Comparable sales in the building and on the block. Days on market for similar units. Current inventory and absorption rate. The specific features of your apartment that add or subtract value. And honestly, my gut after 27 years of watching this market move.
Numbers matter. But so does judgment.
If you are thinking about selling, the conversation about price needs to happen before you sign anything. Not after.
Let's talk.
What Every NYC Buyer Needs to Know About Co-op Board Packages
4/21/2026
If you are buying an apartment in New York City, at some point you will likely face a co-op board. And if you are not prepared, that board can deny you, no matter how qualified you are financially.
I have been through this process hundreds of times, on both sides of the table. Here is what I know.
The package is everything.
A co-op board package is a detailed application that includes your financial statements, tax returns, bank statements, reference letters, and more. It can run anywhere from 20 to over 100 pages depending on the building. Most buyers underestimate how seriously boards take it.
A sloppy package signals a sloppy buyer. Boards are not just evaluating your finances. They are evaluating whether you belong in their building.
Common mistakes that get buyers denied:
Incomplete financials. Missing pages from tax returns or bank statements will stop a package cold. Reference letters that are generic or too short. Boards want to hear specifics, not boilerplate. Poor organization. If a reviewer has to hunt for information, you are already at a disadvantage. Unexplained large deposits or withdrawals. Anything unusual needs a clear written explanation included in the package.
What I do differently.
I treat every co-op package like the deal depends on it, because it does. I review every page before submission, flag anything that needs explanation, and make sure the package tells a coherent, compelling story about the buyer.
In 27 years I have seen qualified buyers get denied because their package was rushed. I have also seen buyers with complicated financials get approved because the package was airtight.
If you are buying a co-op in Manhattan, do not leave this to chance.
Let's talk before you start the process.