1150 Third Avenue (167 East 67th Street)
1150 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10065
- Year built
- 1960
- Type
- Cooperative
- Units
- 96
- Pets
- Pet-friendly (cats and dogs; verify current policy at offer stage)
- Subletting
- Restrictive — permitted once, after one year of ownership, for a maximum of two years with the same tenant
- Financing
- Up to 75% permitted
- Flip tax
- 2% (typically paid by the seller)
Every recorded sale at this building, 2003–2026
Bedroom-by-bedroom medians, the full transfer record, and how units trade against ask.
- 1BR median
- $750K
- Recent range
- $520K – $1.5M
- Listing discount
- 1.6%
- Recorded transfers
- 92
1150 Third Avenue — known in the resale market primarily by its residential address, 167 East 67th Street — is a value-oriented Lenox Hill cooperative on the corner of Third and 67th. Built in 1960 and converted to cooperative ownership in 1969, it is one of the neighborhood's more accessible full-service co-ops: a 20-story doorman building known for low maintenance charges and pet-friendly policies, at a price point well below the prime Upper East Side avenues.
For buyers, that value positioning is the building's defining feature. The Upper East Side's cooperative stock spans an enormous price range, and 1150 Third sits at the entry-to-mid tier — a doorman cooperative with real service and manageable carrying costs, in a Lenox Hill location steps from the 6 train, from Third Avenue retail, and from the neighborhood's schools and medical corridor. Buyers who want the cooperative form and an Upper East Side address without the trophy-avenue pricing consistently find their way to buildings like this one.
The building's low maintenance is a genuine draw and a real distinction in a category where carrying costs vary widely. Some apartments are laid out as duplexes, adding configuration variety to the postwar mix. Like most Upper East Side cooperatives, the building prices in rooms rather than square feet.
Building operations
1150 Third Avenue operates as a full-service cooperative with a 24-hour doorman, a live-in super, a central laundry, free bike storage, and private storage cages. In-unit washer/dryers are permitted with board approval. The building is known for its comparatively low maintenance charges, which is a meaningful distinction in the category.
As a cooperative, the building reviews prospective purchasers through a board application and interview process. Financing is permitted up to 75%, the flip tax is 2% (typically paid by the seller), and pied-à-terre use is permitted with board approval. Subletting is restrictive — permitted once, after one year of ownership, for a maximum of two years with the same tenant — so buyers seeking rental flexibility should weigh that. Specific current policies should be confirmed against building materials and the managing agent during due diligence. Our Co-op vs Condo guide covers the ownership-structure framing.
Recent sales
1150 Third trades at Lenox Hill's value cooperative tier, priced by room, with recent trading well below the prime Upper East Side avenue cooperatives. The building's low maintenance and pet-friendly policies support demand at the entry-to-mid tier, while the restrictive sublet policy keeps the resident base owner-occupied. As with any cooperative, pricing should be read at the apartment level; room count, floor, exposure, condition, and whether the apartment is a duplex all drive variation.
Recent transfers at this building, curated by The Roebling Team research desk. Apartment-level facts are independently verified before publishing; sale prices reflect the recorded transfer amount at the NYC Department of Finance.
| Date | Unit | Apartment | Price | PPSF | vs. Ask |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| May 7, 2026 | 8A | 2 BR · 2 BA | $1,515,000 | +1.3% | |
| Nov 6, 2025 | 7E | 1 BR · 1 BA · 750 sf | $659,000 | $879/sf | -5.2% |
| Apr 29, 2025 | 15D | 550 sf | $569,000 | $1,035/sf | off-mkt |
| Oct 8, 2024 | 4C | 2 BR · 2 BA | $1,125,000 | -2.2% | |
| Sep 10, 2024 | 20D | 2 BR · 1.5 BA | $1,400,000 | -11.9% | |
| Mar 27, 2024 | 6E | 1 BR · 1 BA · 750 sf | $800,000 | $1,067/sf | off-mkt |
| May 25, 2023 | 7D | 5 BR · 1 BA | $520,000 | -1.0% | |
| Jan 12, 2023 | 15B | 5 BR · 1 BA | $575,000 | +4.7% |
Market read. $/sf is measured on the latest sales with reliable square footage (2025): a median $880/sf across 2 sales. The building has traded as recently as 2026. Median listing discount 4.1% from the last ask — a recurring negotiation gap worth pricing into any offer or listing strategy.
The retrade record
Lines that have traded more than once in the public record — the building’s appreciation arc, apartment by apartment.
Other recent transfers
| Date | Unit | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Oct 15, 2024 | 15A | $1,350,000 |
| Oct 2, 2024 | 5A | $1,495,000 |
| Apr 24, 2024 | 15E | $649,000 |
| Feb 14, 2024 | 18C | $1,200,000 |
| May 4, 2023 | 7F | $699,000 |
| Aug 1, 2022 | 14B | $550,000 |
Full closing history with price-per-square-foot over time, the complete retrade record, and every line that has traded.
Sales sourced from NYC Department of Finance recorded transfers (BBL 1-01402-0033) 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 on co-ops is not officially recorded, figures shown are approximate.
What to know if you’re buying
This is a value-oriented cooperative — priced by room, board-approved. Expect the cooperative purchase framework: a board application, a financial review, and an interview. The building's appeal is the combination of a doorman, real service, and low maintenance at an accessible Lenox Hill price.
The low maintenance is a genuine draw. Carrying costs vary widely across Upper East Side cooperatives; 1150 Third's comparatively low maintenance is a real distinction. Confirm current figures during due diligence.
Subletting is restrictive. The building permits subletting only once, after one year, for up to two years with the same tenant. Buyers who need rental flexibility should weigh this carefully.
The building is pet-friendly. Cats and dogs are welcome, subject to current policy — confirm specifics.
Model the maintenance and the underlying mortgage. As a cooperative, the monthly maintenance covers the building's operating costs, property taxes, and any underlying mortgage. Review the building's financials and reserve position.
What to know if you’re selling
Foreground the value positioning and the low maintenance. The building's accessible pricing, low carrying costs, and pet-friendly policies are its principal selling points at the Lenox Hill entry-to-mid tier. Lead marketing with them.
Pricing requires apartment-level comparable analysis. Recent comparables on the specific line, room count, floor, and configuration (including duplex layouts) should anchor the approach.
Board approvability shapes the buyer pool. Prepare buyers for the cooperative application, and price and position to attract financially qualified applicants who will clear the board.
Closing timelines run to the cooperative calendar. Plan for a board application and interview cycle in addition to standard closing timelines.
Comparable buildings
If you're considering 1150 Third Avenue, also evaluate:
- 1156 Third Avenue — nearby Third Avenue building
- 1010 Third Avenue — nearby Third Avenue inventory
- 301 East 66th Street — nearby Lenox Hill cooperative
- 201 East 62nd Street — nearby Lenox Hill building
- 166 East 63rd Street — nearby Lenox Hill building
- 188 East 64th Street — nearby Lenox Hill cooperative
The Roebling Team at 1150 Third Avenue (167 East 67th Street)
The Roebling Team at Compass specializes in the Upper East Side, including Lenox Hill's cooperative inventory, and the broader Park-facing Manhattan market. We publish this building profile because cooperative buyers and sellers deserve building-specific intelligence — architecture, operational reality, transactional mechanics, and apartment-level pricing — not generic market commentary.
If you're considering a purchase or sale at 1150 Third Avenue, a 30-minute consultation is the right starting point. We'll bring the full context this page provides plus the transactional specifics your situation requires.
Corey Cohen · The Roebling Team at Compass 646.939.7375 · c.cohen@compass.com
The neighborhood
For the full corridor — architecture, schools, transit, and pricing across Upper East Side — read The Roebling Team Guide to Upper East Side.
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