139 East 63rd Street (Beekman Estate)Recorded sales & closing prices

139 East 63rd Street, New York, NY 10065

51 recorded transfers, 2003–2025. Sortable and searchable below.

1BR
$662K
median of 2 recent · '24–'25
2BR
$995K
median of 3 recent · '24–'25
Recent range
$625K – $995K
all types, last 4 yrs
Listing discount
3.8%
median, from last ask
Recorded transfers
51
2003–2025 on record

Not enough recent activity to price (shown for completeness, not quoted): Studio — last traded 2008; 3BR — last traded 2025.

The complete recorded-sale history for Beekman Estate, compiled from NYC Department of Finance transfer records and verified listing data, then enriched apartment-by-apartment by The Roebling Team research desk. Priced by apartment type — the honest unit for a co-op, where square footage isn’t officially recorded.

Latest closings

2025-09 · 1BR
2C  $625,000
2025-09 · 2BR
3B  $900,000
2025-08 · 2BR
8D  $995,000
2025-01 · 3BR
4A  $995,000
2024-10 · 2BR
15A  $995,000
2024-10 · 1BR
9C  $699,000

The line premium — where you sit sets the price

Same-2BR prices, time-controlled to today’s dollars, split by line — exposure, light, and layout vary stack to stack within a building.

Bar = today’s 2BR price for that line; right column = premium vs. an average 2BR.

Line B 7 sales
$960,088
-4%

And by floor

Same 2BR, time-controlled to today — higher floors, higher clears.

Floors 11–15 3 sales
$995,000
+0%
Floors 6–10 4 sales
$977,544
-2%
Floors 1–5 3 sales
$995,000
+0%

The 2BR trajectory

Every recorded 2BR. The building trades thinly year to year, so the story is the long arc, not any single year: 2BRs have moved from roughly $1.15M in the mid-2000s to about $995K today.

Each dot is one recorded sale, by close date and price; the line is the median for each year. Click any dot to jump straight to that sale below.

$600K$1.57M$2.55M'03'14'253B · $900,000 · '258D · $995,000 · '2515A · $995,000 · '244B · $1,200,000 · '2215B · $1,282,500 · '2214B · $996,000 · '226B · $965,000 · '225D · $1,140,000 · '217B · $1,250,000 · '218B · $1,100,000 · '2115A · $1,775,000 · '1915B · $1,550,000 · '167B · $1,190,000 · '1616B · $2,400,000 · '1615C · $1,420,000 · '155D · $1,337,500 · '1515A · $1,500,000 · '1516C · $1,775,000 · '144B · $1,100,000 · '138B · $1,250,000 · '109B · $1,300,000 · '1012B · $1,125,000 · '1016B · $1,500,000 · '078B · $1,200,000 · '0711C · $695,000 · '066D · $1,300,500 · '053D · $1,149,000 · '048D · $895,000 · '044D · $1,200,000 · '03

Lines that traded more than once

The building’s appreciation arc, apartment by apartment — recorded prices, exact.

16B+60%
$1,500,000 2007$2,400,000 2016
8D+11%
$895,000 2004$995,000 2025
4B+9%
$1,100,000 2013$1,200,000 2022
7B+5%
$1,190,000 2016$1,250,000 2021
2C-7%
$675,000 2012$625,000 2025
8B-8%
$1,200,000 2007$1,250,000 2010$1,100,000 2021
5D-15%
$1,337,500 2015$1,140,000 2021
15B-17%
$1,550,000 2016$1,282,500 2022
8C-21%
$825,000 2015$650,000 2021
15A-34%
$1,500,000 2015$1,775,000 2019$995,000 2024

Every recorded sale

Sort any column; filter by unit or keyword. Prices are the recorded transfer amount at the NYC Department of Finance.

51 recorded sales
Apartment
Sep 25, 20252C1 BR · 1.5 BA$625,000-3.8%
Sep 19, 20253B2 BR · 2 BA$900,000-2.7%
Aug 26, 20258D2 BR · 2 BA$995,000-0.4%
Jan 27, 20254A3 BR · 3 BA$995,000-9.5%
Oct 17, 202415A2 BR · 2 BA$995,000
Oct 16, 20249C1 BR · 1.5 BA$699,000-12.5%
Dec 13, 20224B2 BR · 2 BA$1,200,000-4.0%
Jul 26, 202215B2 BR · 2 BA$1,282,500-4.6%
Jun 10, 202214B2 BR · 2 BA$996,000-23.1%
May 23, 20226B2 BR · 2 BA$965,000-9.0%
Feb 9, 2022PHB2 BR · 3 BA$1,650,000-17.5%
Dec 6, 20215D2 BR · 2 BA$1,140,000
Nov 23, 20217B2 BR · 2 BA$1,250,000
Oct 20, 20218B2 BR · 2 BA$1,100,000-12.0%
Mar 3, 20218C1 BR · 1.5 BA$650,000-7.1%
Mar 20, 201915A2 BR · 2 BA$1,775,000-5.3%
Jan 26, 20177A3 BR · 3 BA$1,561,000-10.0%
Dec 20, 201615B2 BR · 2.5 BA$1,550,000
Dec 7, 201611D1 BR$995,000-11.6%
Nov 4, 20167B2 BR$1,190,000-17.9%
Aug 16, 201616B2 BR · 2 BA$2,400,000-3.8%
Jun 22, 201515C2 BR$1,420,000-11.0%
Mar 18, 20155D2 BR$1,337,500-4.1%
Feb 20, 20158C1 BR$825,000-8.2%
Jan 14, 201515A2 BR$1,500,000-3.2%
Nov 24, 201416C2 BR$1,775,000-6.3%
Aug 21, 20134B2 BR$1,100,000-12.0%
Nov 20, 20126C1 BR$795,000
Aug 10, 20122C1 BR$675,000-3.4%
Jun 1, 20127C1 BR$740,000-6.9%
Aug 25, 20108B2 BR$1,250,000
Jul 14, 20109B2 BR$1,300,000-5.5%
May 3, 20101214A$2,840,000
Feb 25, 20105C1 BR$680,000-14.9%
Jan 21, 201012B2 BR$1,125,000
Sep 29, 20092D$1,440,000
Feb 13, 200811B/C3 BR$845,000
Feb 13, 200811BStudio$845,000
Sep 21, 200716B2 BR$1,500,000
Sep 10, 20078B2 BR$1,200,000-4.0%
Apr 5, 200716/17APH2 BR$2,495,000
Apr 4, 2007RES$2,495,000
Mar 16, 200611C2 BR$695,000
Dec 15, 20056D2 BR$1,300,500+0.4%
Aug 31, 20052A3 BR$2,395,000
Jul 15, 2005RES$2,200,000
Nov 22, 20042DStudio$995,000
Sep 9, 2004RES$1,164,000
Sep 9, 20043D2 BR$1,149,000
Feb 18, 20048D2 BR$895,000
Oct 15, 20034D2 BR$1,200,000

Sales sourced from NYC Department of Finance recorded transfers (BBL 1-01398-7502) and verified listing data. Co-op apartments are priced by unit type (bedroom count) rather than per square foot — square footage isn’t officially recorded for co-ops, and room counts carry some agent-entry inconsistency, so bedroom type is the reliable spine. Non-arms-length transfers and storage/parking are excluded; line and floor premiums are time-controlled to today’s pricing. Where transaction volume is too thin to support a figure, none is shown.

Buying or selling at Beekman Estate?

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 · The Roebling Team at Compass
646.939.7375 · c.cohen@compass.com