NYC Neighborhood Comparison
Side-by-side market data, transit, and neighborhood profiles to help you decide.
Brooklyn
Queens
For buyers focused on affordability, Little Neck has the lower median sale price at $450K vs $630K in Ditmas Park.
Investors analyzing rental yield will find Little Neck offers a stronger rent-to-price ratio based on current market data.
| Metric | Ditmas Park | Little Neck |
|---|---|---|
| Median Sale Price | $630,000 | $450,000 |
| Median Condo Price | N/A | N/A |
| Median Co-op Price | $557,500 | $379,500 |
| Median Rent | $2,780 | $4,097.5 |
| Active Listings | 42 | 11 |
| Rental Inventory | 98 | 1 |
| Days on Market | 57.5 | 66 |
| Price Cut Share | 11.9% | 5.6% |
| Monthly Sales Volume | 5 | 6 |
| YoY Price Change | -64.0% | +23.3% |
| YoY Rent Change | +12.3% | 0.0% |
| YoY Inventory Change | -4.5% | -38.9% |
| Subway Lines | N/A | N/A |
Prices in Ditmas Park moved -64.0% over the past year, compared to +23.3% in Little Neck. Little Neck is seeing price appreciation while Ditmas Park has softened, pointing to different supply-demand dynamics in each market.
Ditmas Park is a landmarked Brooklyn neighborhood recognized for its freestanding Victorian, Colonial Revival, Tudor, and Craftsman homes set back from the street with porches and landscaped yards. The B and Q trains serve the neighborhood at Cortelyou Road, Beverley Road, Newkirk Plaza, and Avenue H stations, and Prospect Park's 526 acres of green space sit just to the northwest. The historic district encompasses roughly 2,000 residential buildings dating from 1902 to 1914, making it one of the city's best-preserved collections of early 20th-century residential architecture.
View Full Market ReportLittle Neck features Cape Cod, Tudor Revival, and colonial-style homes built between the 1920s and 1960s, set on low-traffic residential blocks near the borough's highest point at Little Neck Hills. The LIRR station provides 30-minute commutes to Penn Station, and the 635-acre Alley Pond Park and Udalls Cove nature preserve border the neighborhood.
View Full Market ReportNo subway data available
No subway data available
Listing data is derived in whole or in part from the RLS at REBNY (Real Estate Board of New York) Internet Data Exchange (IDX) database. Real estate listings held by brokerage firms other than Milton Coste | Keller Williams NYC are marked with the RLS logo. The information provided is for consumers' personal, non-commercial use and may not be used for any purpose other than to identify prospective properties consumers may be interested in purchasing. Data is refreshed every 15 minutes per REBNY IDX requirements.
From the 2008 financial crisis through the 2020 pandemic, the NYC metro Case-Shiller composite fell about 25% peak-to-trough between 2007 and 2012, then fully recovered by 2017 and gained another 15% through Q1 2020. Ditmas Park and Little Neck both tracked this broader NYC arc, with annual closing volume contracting sharply in 2009 and again in Q2 2020 before normalizing.
Outer-borough submarkets including Ditmas Park and Little Neck generally tracked the broader NYC metro pattern of a 20% to 25% peak-to-trough decline before fully recovering by 2017 and posting further gains through early 2020.
Source: Per Case-Shiller Home Price Index, NYC metro subset, 2008-2020, cross-referenced with StreetEasy historical price data series.
| Metric (2026) | Ditmas Park | Little Neck |
|---|---|---|
| Median Sale Price | $630,000 | $450,000 |
| Median Rent | $2,780/mo | $4,097.5/mo |
| Year-over-Year Price Change | -64.0% | +23.3% |
| Average Days on Market | 57.5 days | 66 days |
| Distance to Nearest Subway | N/A | N/A |
Table values reflect current 2026 market conditions. Historical 2008-2020 commentary is sourced from Case-Shiller NYC metro composite and StreetEasy historical series.
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Data updated: