Cooperative
220 East 67th Street
220 East 67th Street, New York, NY 10065

220 East 67th Street

220 East 67th Street, New York, NY 10065

At a glance
Type
Cooperative
Units
113
Floors
14
Pets
Pets permitted (cats and dogs)
Flip tax
$35 per share, paid by the seller
The Data Room

Every recorded sale at this building, 2004–2026

Price-per-square-foot over time, the line- and floor-premium curves, and every recorded sale.

Median $/sf
$904
Listing discount
4.0%
Recorded sales
75
On record
2004–2026

220 East 67th Street is a large full-service postwar cooperative in the heart of Lenox Hill — the kind of building that anchors the Upper East Side's middle market, offering doorman service, an on-site garage, and a roof deck at price points well below the Park-and-Fifth prewar band. It is the workhorse of the corridor: a mid-block red-brick tower where a studio can still be entered in the low six figures while a combined family apartment reaches into the multi-millions.

The building's appeal is fundamentally about access to Lenox Hill living with full-service infrastructure. Sitting between Second and Third Avenues, it delivers Upper East Side location, staffed lobby, garage, laundry, and roof deck — the operational package a large postwar co-op is built to provide — without the entry premium of the boutique prewar cooperatives clustered west toward Park Avenue. For buyers who prioritize monthly-carry efficiency and building services over prewar architectural pedigree, 220 East 67th is a structural fit.

Its broad unit mix is part of the story. The building runs from studios through large combined three-to-five-bedroom apartments, which produces an unusually wide pricing spread for a single address and a shareholder community that spans first-time buyers, downsizers, and families combining lines. That mix supports steady transaction volume and a liquid resale market.

Architecture and unit composition

220 East 67th is a postwar red-brick apartment house of roughly 14 stories built in the early 1960s and converted to cooperative ownership in 1987. The facade features a one-story marble base, black granite planters, and a canopied entrance leading to a well-appointed lobby. It is a straightforward, well-proportioned postwar building — the architect is not publicly documented — with self-service elevators and consistent fenestration.

The apartment mix runs the full range: studios, one-bedrooms, two-bedrooms, and larger combined units created by joining adjacent lines. Several multi-line combinations on the upper floors run to 2,900 square feet and beyond. Ceiling heights and layouts are typical of the era — efficient, light-filled, and readily renovated.

Views improve with altitude; upper floors capture open Lenox Hill sky and cross-street light, and the furnished roof deck above the top residential floor is a genuine amenity for a building of this class.

Building operations

220 East 67th operates as a full-service cooperative with a 24-hour doorman, live-in superintendent, on-site independent parking garage, central laundry room, bike storage, and a furnished roof deck. Elevators are self-service and have been recently modernized. The building does not have a health club or gym.

Financing is capped at 75% (25% minimum down payment). The flip tax is structured as $35 per share, paid by the seller. Subletting is permitted with board approval and a sublet fee equal to 20% of annual maintenance; residency terms should be confirmed against current house rules at offer stage. Pied-à-terre ownership, co-purchasing (parents buying for children), and guarantors are all permitted, subject to board review. As with any cooperative, board approval and a board interview are required.

Recent sales

220 East 67th trades as a liquid, broad-spectrum postwar co-op rather than a trophy address — its value proposition is Lenox Hill location and full building services at accessible pricing. Because the building spans studios through large combined family apartments, the pricing range is wide, and per-room value is best read within a unit's specific size, floor, and condition rather than a single building average. Recent sales activity has spanned entry studios in the low-to-mid six figures up to combined multi-bedroom units well into the multi-millions. As with any cooperative, pricing is expressed on a per-room and per-share basis, and the maintenance-to-value relationship is central to how buyers underwrite.

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.

DateUnitApartmentPricePPSFvs. Ask
Apr 27, 20267J
1 BR · 1 BA · 600 sf
$530,000$883/sf-1.7%
Dec 9, 20251C
1 BR · 1 BA · 775 sf
$620,000$800/sf-11.4%
Nov 7, 20259A
5 BR · 1 BA
$505,000+6.3%
Feb 19, 202512E
1 BR · 1 BA · 970 sf
$935,000$964/sf-2.5%
Sep 28, 202314C
2 BR · 2 BA
$1,100,000-13.3%
Aug 16, 20237G
2 BR · 2 BA · 1,234 sf
$1,235,000$1,001/sf-4.6%
Mar 20, 202310G
2 BR · 2 BA · 1,234 sf
$1,290,000$1,045/sf-2.6%
Jun 1, 20221D
2 BR · 2 BA · 950 sf
$790,000$832/sf-1.1%

Market read. Most recent trades (2026) cleared a median $904/sf across 1 sale. Median listing discount 4.0% 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.

PHB · 1,400 sf+51%
$890,000 ($636/sf) 2010$1,185,000 ($846/sf) 2015$1,345,000 ($961/sf) 2017$1,345,000 ($961/sf) 2017
1D · 950 sf+49%
$530,000 ($558/sf) 2005$790,000 ($832/sf) 2022
11G+31%
$1,180,000 2019$1,550,000 2026
5E · 900 sf+28%
$680,000 ($756/sf) 2014$870,000 ($967/sf) 2016
3G+27%
$870,000 2011$1,108,000 2019

Other recent transfers

DateUnitPrice
Jun 11, 202611G$1,550,000
May 28, 20269B$505,000
Apr 26, 20225G$970,000
May 29, 2019PHC/D$2,270,000
Jan 24, 20178E$650,000
Dec 22, 20165D$1,300,000
View all 75 recorded transfers, sortable

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 1-01421-0037) 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 full-service co-op at accessible pricing. Doorman, garage, roof deck, and live-in super — the operational package of a large postwar building — at Lenox Hill price points below the prewar band.

Underwrite the maintenance and the flip tax. Model monthly maintenance against comparable buildings, and note the $35-per-share flip tax is a seller cost that factors into resale economics.

Financing is capped at 75%. Plan for a minimum 25% down payment; the board reviews post-closing liquidity as customary for UES cooperatives.

The building is co-op-flexible on use. Pied-à-terre ownership, co-purchasing, and guarantors are permitted, and subletting is allowed with board approval and a fee — broader flexibility than many prewar peers.

Board approval and a board interview are required. Build the standard cooperative timeline into your plan.

What to know if you’re selling

Position within the building's wide range. With inventory spanning studios to large combinations, comparable selection is everything — price against the closest match on line, floor, size, and condition.

Lead with the full-service story. Doorman, garage, roof deck, and live-in super are the differentiators against smaller Lenox Hill co-ops; make them central to the marketing.

Prepare buyers for the board. A clean, well-documented board package and realistic financial-requirement guidance shortens the path to a signed and approved deal.

Set expectations on the flip tax. The $35-per-share seller flip tax should be modeled into net proceeds up front.

Comparable buildings

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The Roebling Team at 220 East 67th Street

The Roebling Team at Compass specializes in Central Park West, the Upper East Side, and the broader Park-facing Manhattan market. We publish this building profile because buyers and sellers in full-service postwar cooperatives deserve building-specific intelligence — architecture, operational reality, board policy, and apartment-level pricing context — not generic market commentary.

If you're considering a purchase or sale at 220 East 67th, 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 — financial structuring, board-package strategy, comparable analysis at the apartment level, and the pacing that fits your timeline.

The neighborhood

For the full corridor — architecture, schools, transit, and pricing across Upper East Side — read The Roebling Team Guide to Upper East Side.

Considering a move at 220 East 67th Street?

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