11 Prince StreetRecorded sales & closing prices

11 Prince Street, New York, NY 10012

17 recorded closings, 2003–2025. Sortable and searchable below.

Recorded closings
17
Date range
2003–2025
Median $/sf
$1,695
2025 · adjusted
Listing discount
0.2%
median, from last ask
Price range
$697K – $2.05M
Price shift · median $/sf · constant-quality
Since 2003
+88.3%
10-Year
+19.5%
Since 2022
+15%
1-Year
+18.8%

Change in the building’s median $/sf over each window, adjusted to a constant-quality (average-floor) unit so it reflects price — not which floors happened to sell. (2022 marks the rate-shock inflection.) Like-for-like repeat-sale figures to follow.

Condominium pricing is read on a per-square-foot basis, and 11 Prince trades as a boutique Nolita condo — smaller layouts, contemporary finishes, and the flexibility premium that deeded ownership commands, at a solid mid-to-upper Nolita tier rather than the ultra-luxury end. With only 22 residences and four per floor, resale volume is thin: a handful of closings in an active year. Pricing is driven by floor, exposure, outdoor space, roof access, and renovation condition rather than by any neighborhood average. The location — the nexus of Nolita, SoHo, and the Lower East Side — is part of the value story. When underwriting a purchase or a list price, capture the specific unit's square footage, light, and outdoor space rather than leaning on a downtown headline number.

The complete recorded-sale history for Eleven Prince, compiled from NYC Department of Finance transfer records and verified listing data, then enriched apartment-by-apartment by The Roebling Team research desk. Across sales with a public asking price, the building carries a median listing discount of 0.2% from the last ask — a recurring negotiation gap worth pricing into any offer or listing strategy here.

Price per square foot over time

14 sales with a known square footage, by closing date.

$786$1,387$1,987'03'07'11'15'19'23'256B · $850/sf · 20031B · $908/sf · 20042A · $1,213/sf · 20056B · $1,008/sf · 20055A · $1,146/sf · 20064B · $1,099/sf · 20071B · $1,351/sf · 20084C · $960/sf · 20091B · $1,682/sf · 20143B · $1,923/sf · 20171B · $1,864/sf · 20224C · $956/sf · 20236A · $1,573/sf · 20245D · $1,743/sf · 2025
Each dot is one recorded sale with a known interior square footage, plotted by closing date against price per square foot. The line is the median $/sf each year, adjusted to a constant-quality (average-floor) unit — so it reflects price movement, not which floors happened to sell that year. Individual sale prices in the table below are unadjusted — and you can click any dot to jump straight to that sale.

Recent closings

The building’s 10 most recent market sales.

DateUnitApartmentPrice$/sfvs. Ask
Dec 18, 20255D631 sf$1,100,000$1,743
Oct 24, 20246A1 BR · 1 BA · 750 sf$1,180,000$1,573-8.9%
Oct 31, 20234C2 BR · 1,203 sf$1,150,000$956
May 25, 20224B2 BR · 2 BA$2,018,000+0.9%
Mar 15, 20221B1 BR · 1 BA · 1,100 sf$2,050,000$1,864
Oct 24, 20173B2 BR · 910 sf$1,750,000$1,923
Jan 12, 20154A1 BR$1,180,000-1.7%
Jan 8, 20141B1 BR · 1,100 sf$1,850,000$1,682
Sep 18, 20094C2 BR · 1,286 sf$1,235,000$960-4.6%
Oct 22, 20081B1 BR · 1,100 sf$1,486,500$1,351-0.2%

The retrade record

Lines that have changed hands more than once in the public record — the building’s appreciation arc, apartment by apartment.

1B · 1,100 sf+105%
$998,500 ($908/sf) 2004$1,486,500 ($1,351/sf) 2008$1,850,000 ($1,682/sf) 2014$2,050,000 ($1,864/sf) 2022
4B+102%
$999,750 ($1,099/sf) 2007$2,018,000 2022
4A+28%
$924,000 2008$1,180,000 2015
4C · 1,203 sf-7%
$1,235,000 ($960/sf) 2009$1,150,000 ($956/sf) 2023

Every recorded sale

Sort any column; filter by unit or keyword. Prices are the recorded transfer amount at the NYC Department of Finance. Every sale sits in one of three states: counted in the building’s medians and trend; shown but excluded as a non-arms-length or nominal transfer; or shown and ⚑ flagged for review — a possible duplicate filing or an extreme $/sf outlier, held out of the statistics pending manual verification rather than allowed to move them.

17 recorded sales
Apartment
Dec 18, 20255D631$1,100,000$1,743
Oct 24, 20246A1 BR · 1 BA750$1,180,000$1,573-8.9%
Oct 31, 20234C2 BR1,203$1,150,000$956
May 25, 20224B2 BR · 2 BA$2,018,000+0.9%
Mar 15, 20221B1 BR · 1 BA1,100$2,050,000$1,864
Oct 24, 20173B2 BR910$1,750,000$1,923
Jan 12, 20154A1 BR$1,180,000-1.7%
Jan 8, 20141B1 BR1,100$1,850,000$1,682
Sep 18, 20094C2 BR1,286$1,235,000$960-4.6%
Oct 22, 20081B1 BR1,100$1,486,500$1,351-0.2%
Jul 22, 20084A1 BR$924,000+2.8%
Mar 22, 20074B2 BR · 2 BA910$999,750$1,099-9.0%
Jul 12, 20065A1 BR700$802,000$1,146+6.9%
Sep 9, 20056B2 BR843$850,000$1,008
Jul 12, 20052A574$696,500$1,213
Aug 6, 20041B1 BR1,100$998,500$908-0.1%
Nov 14, 20036B2 BR1,000$850,000$850

Sales sourced from NYC Department of Finance recorded transfers (BBL 1-00507-7501) and verified listing data. Apartment-level facts (line, condition, asking-price context) curated and cross-verified by The Roebling Team research desk. Not all transactions cross-verify with ACRIS records — sponsor and LLC purchases sometimes record at stipulated values rather than market price; square footage from recorded condo declarations and offering plans. Storage, parking, and commercial units are excluded from all figures. Floor- and line-level $/sf are time-controlled (each sale measured against the building’s going rate at the time of sale) and expressed at today’s pricing, so they isolate the floor or line premium rather than blend two decades of market movement.

Buying or selling at Eleven Prince?

Put this data to work.

Buying here

Know what’s fair before you offer — we’ll show you where each line trades, the building’s discount-to-ask pattern, and where the value sits right now.

Selling here

Price to the building’s real trajectory, not a guess — we’ll position your line against its true comps to maximize the outcome.

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Corey Cohen, Principal · The Roebling Team at Compass
646.939.7375 · c.cohen@compass.com