Guide + Resources from Milton Coste
25+ years closing investor deals across all five boroughs and the Hudson Valley.
Milton Coste
Licensed Real Estate Associate Broker
Keller Williams NYC
NY License #10401274378
WhatsApp180
Days to close 1031 replacement property
Source: IRS Publication 544
New York City has added fewer than 30,000 net new housing units per year over the past decade while its population has remained above 8 million: a supply-demand gap that has driven residential rents and sale prices through cycles that would have crushed other markets. For investors who understand the regulatory environment, that structural undersupply is the core thesis.
In my 25+ years brokering deals across all five boroughs, I've watched investors succeed and fail based almost entirely on one variable: how well they understood what they were buying before they wired the down payment. The city rewards preparation and punishes assumptions.
Several structural factors make NYC a distinct investment market:
The flip side is real: NYC also has some of the highest property taxes, the most complex rent regulation framework in the country, and active code enforcement agencies that can generate five-figure violation costs within months of acquisition. Eyes open going in matters more here than in most US markets.
Choosing the right asset class is the first decision, and it drives everything from financing to management complexity to exit strategy.
New construction in NYC often carries a 421-a tax abatement, a temporary reduction in property taxes, phased in over 10 to 35 years depending on the program and building location. These abatements expire. A building that cash-flows well at year five may look very different at year fifteen when the tax bill reverts. Always model out the post-abatement tax load before buying into a new development with an active abatement. Source: NYC DOF 421-a program records.
Four metrics do most of the analytical work on an NYC investment property. None of them should be read in isolation.
| Metric | Formula | What It Tells You |
|---|---|---|
| Cap Rate | NOI / Purchase Price | Return assuming all-cash purchase; useful for comparing properties |
| GRM | Purchase Price / Annual Gross Rent | Quick screen; lower GRM is generally better; ignores expenses |
| Cash-on-Cash Return | Annual Pre-Tax Cash Flow / Total Cash Invested | Actual return on your deployed capital after debt service |
| DSCR | NOI / Annual Debt Service | Lenders typically require 1.20x or higher to approve financing |
Income (Annual)
Expenses (Annual)
NOI
~$60,685
Cap Rate
~3.0%
GRM
~17.4x
Illustrative only. Actual rents, taxes, and expenses vary by property. Verify all figures with a CPA before making any acquisition decision. No return is guaranteed.
Use the mortgage calculator and closing cost calculator for your specific deal parameters.
Milton reviews investor deal financials as part of every buyer consultation. No cost, no commitment.
Roughly one million NYC apartments are subject to rent stabilization, governed by the NYC Division of Housing and Community Renewal (DHCR) and the NYC Rent Guidelines Board (RGB). Understanding what you're buying before contract is non-negotiable.
Rent regulation law is complex and changes frequently. The Housing Stability and Tenant Protection Act of 2019 (HSTPA) significantly altered the rules. Always consult a NY real estate attorney with rent regulation experience and review DHCR records directly before acquiring any rent-stabilized property. The information below is educational only and not legal advice.
Section 1031 of the Internal Revenue Code permits investors to defer federal capital gains taxes by reinvesting proceeds from a sold investment property into a like-kind replacement. New York State follows federal 1031 rules, so both federal and NYS capital gains taxes can be deferred in the same exchange.
1031 exchange rules are specific, time-sensitive, and have disqualifying traps that cannot be corrected after the fact. Consult your CPA and a licensed 1031 Qualified Intermediary (QI) before executing any exchange. The rules below are a general summary only. Tax situations vary. Nothing here is tax advice.
The neighborhoods below have active multi-family and mixed-use inventory with characteristics that attract investor attention. Descriptions focus on investment-relevant facts: building stock, transit access, cap rate ranges observed in the market, and zoning context. No demographic signals are used to characterize any area. See individual market reports for current pricing data.
Building stock dominated by pre-war walk-ups, brownstones, and elevator buildings along major corridors. Strong subway access on the 2/3, 4/5/6, A/C/B/D, and 1 lines. Mix of rent-stabilized and free-market units. Many buildings carry existing city loan obligations (e.g., HDA programs) that restrict sales and refinancing. Verify with attorney before contract. Cap rate range varies by stabilization exposure and building condition.
View Harlem Market Report →One of Brooklyn's largest concentrations of brownstones and limestone row houses, many configured as two- to four-family buildings. Zoning allows multi-family construction on many blocks. Served by the A/C and J/M/Z trains. A range of entry price points exists across the neighborhood depending on block, condition, and lot size. Rent stabilization is present in larger pre-war buildings.
View Bed-Stuy Market Report →Industrial-residential zoning mix with a high concentration of 2-4 family brick buildings built in the early 20th century. The L and J/M/Z trains provide multiple transit options. Mixed-use buildings along commercial corridors are common. Smaller lot sizes than Bed-Stuy but lower median price per unit in many cases. Verify HPD and DOB violation history carefully on older buildings.
View Bushwick Market Report →My home neighborhood and an area where I've closed dozens of investor deals over 25 years. Pre-war elevator buildings and walk-ups, with significant rent-stabilized inventory. The A express and 1 trains provide direct access to Midtown. Gross yields are generally higher than other Manhattan submarkets. DHCR due diligence is especially important here given the density of older stabilized stock.
View Washington Heights Market Report →Northern tip of Manhattan with pre-war and post-war walk-ups and elevator buildings. Lower land values than mid-Manhattan make multi-family acquisition prices more accessible for investors targeting Manhattan exposure. The A train terminates here with express service south. Mix of stabilized and market-rate apartments.
View Inwood Market Report →One of Queens' most transit-dense neighborhoods: E/J/Z subway lines plus the AirTrain to JFK. Strong two-family and small multi-family market with a range of brick colonials and attached two-families. Commercial corridors along Jamaica Avenue and Sutphin Boulevard. Lower price-per-unit relative to western Queens. Zoning supports moderate-density residential and mixed-use.
View Jamaica Market Report →South Bronx neighborhood directly across the Harlem River from Manhattan, accessible via the 6 train. Entry prices are among the lowest per unit of any close-in borough neighborhood. Mix of attached row houses (some legally configured as multi-family), walk-up apartment buildings, and industrial-zoned lots. Active HPD enforcement history in this area requires careful due diligence on older building stock.
View Mott Haven Market Report →Westchester, Rockland, Dutchess, Orange, and Putnam counties extend the investment market beyond the city. Multi-family buildings in Hudson Valley markets operate under different rent regulation rules (or none at all in some counties). Cap rates tend to be higher than NYC proper. Transit-connected towns like Yonkers, White Plains, and Poughkeepsie draw renters who work in the city.
View Hudson Valley Market Report →Investor closing costs in NYC are higher than most US markets. Underestimating them is one of the most common mistakes I see on first purchases.
| Cost Item | Who Pays | Amount / Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Mansion Tax | Buyer | 1% ($1M-$1.99M) to 3.9% ($25M+), tiered. Source: NYC DOF. |
| NYC Transfer Tax | Seller (affects price negotiation) | 1% under $500K; 1.425% $500K+. Source: NYC DOF. |
| NYS Transfer Tax | Seller (affects price negotiation) | 0.4% (residential); 0.65% ($3M+ residential). Source: NYS DTF. |
| Mortgage Recording Tax | Buyer | 1.8% on loans under $500K; 1.925% on $500K+. Source: NYC DOF. (Higher rate for commercial-classified properties.) |
| Attorney Fees | Buyer | $3,000 to $6,000+ for investment transactions. Varies by complexity. |
| Title Insurance | Buyer | Typically 0.45% to 0.5% of purchase price. Owner's policy protects your equity. |
Use the closing cost calculator to estimate your total closing costs before signing a contract. Always get a line-item estimate from your attorney during due diligence, not after.
These are patterns I've seen repeatedly over 25+ years of brokering investment deals. Each of them has cost buyers real money.
In 25+ years and 2,000+ transactions, I've represented buyers across every investment property category in NYC: two-families in Washington Heights, mixed-use buildings in Brooklyn, portfolio acquisitions in Queens, and Hudson Valley multi-families. I've seen what goes wrong and what makes a deal work.
Note: Per REBNY's 2025 rules, a Buyer Representation Agreement is required before showings. This protects your interests throughout the transaction.
Tell me what you're looking for. I'll review the deal financials, pull comparable sales, and help you decide if it's worth pursuing.
Milton Coste | Licensed Real Estate Associate Broker | Keller Williams NYC | NY #10401274378
Milton will review your goals and follow up within one business day.
Investment Disclaimer: Nothing on this page constitutes investment advice, tax advice, or legal advice. Real estate investments carry risk, including the possible loss of principal. Cap rates, rents, appreciation, and vacancy figures described on this page are illustrative and are not guarantees of future performance. Past results do not predict future outcomes. Always consult a licensed CPA, attorney, and financial advisor before making any real estate investment decision.
Rent Stabilization: NYC rent regulation law is complex and subject to change. DHCR rules, RGB annual increases, and HSTPA provisions described on this page are accurate as of the publication date but may change. Consult a NY real estate attorney before acquiring rent-stabilized property.
1031 Exchange: IRS Section 1031 rules are specific and time-sensitive. Failure to comply with identification or closing deadlines can disqualify the exchange and trigger immediate tax liability. Consult a licensed CPA and Qualified Intermediary before executing any 1031 exchange.
Brokerage: Milton Coste | Licensed Real Estate Associate Broker | NY License #10401274378 | Keller Williams NYC | 360 Madison Avenue, 9th Floor, New York, NY 10017 | (917) 416-7433 | mcoste@kwnyc.com