322 East 57th StreetRecorded sales & closing prices
322 East 57th Street, New York, NY 10022
22 recorded transfers, 2003–2025. Sortable and searchable below.
- Recent range
- $3M – $6M
- Recorded transfers
- 22
Not enough recent activity to price (shown for completeness, not quoted): 2BR — last traded 2021; 3BR — last traded 2025; 4BR+ — last traded 2025.
The complete recorded-sale history for 322 East 57th Street, 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
The line premium — where you sit sets the price
Same-3BR prices, time-controlled to today’s dollars, split by line — exposure, light, and layout vary stack to stack within a building.
Bar = today’s 3BR price for that line; right column = premium vs. an average 3BR.
The 3BR trajectory
Every recorded 3BR. The building trades thinly year to year, so the story is the long arc, not any single year: 3BRs have moved from roughly $3.5M in the mid-2000s to about $3.9M today.
Each dot is one recorded sale, by close date and price; the line is the median for each year.
Every recorded sale
Sort any column; filter by unit or keyword. Prices are the recorded transfer amount at the NYC Department of Finance.
| Apartment | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Oct 3, 2025 | 1213A | 4 BR · 3 BA | $5,999,000 |
| Aug 12, 2025 | 1415A | 3 BR · 2 BA · 7 rm | $2,999,999 |
| Apr 18, 2023 | 6/7B | 2 BR · 2.5 BA | $4,700,000 |
| Dec 15, 2022 | 4/5B | 3 BR · 3 BA | $3,100,000 |
| Mar 21, 2022 | 16/17 | 3.5 BA | $5,750,000 |
| Nov 16, 2021 | 2/3A | $2,000,000 | |
| Aug 20, 2021 | 1819B | 2 BR · 2.5 BA | $2,000,000 |
| Nov 17, 2020 | 6-7A | $3,900,000 | |
| Jun 13, 2018 | 1415B | 3 BR | $5,260,000 |
| May 23, 2018 | 1213A | 3 BR | $4,000,000 |
| Oct 31, 2017 | 2/3A | 2 BR | $2,200,000 |
| Jan 25, 2017 | 2 | 2 BR | $2,995,000 |
| Mar 10, 2016 | 16/17 | $4,750,000 | |
| Sep 15, 2015 | 6 | 2 BR | $2,750,000 |
| Jul 21, 2011 | 8-9B | 4 BR | $3,000,000 |
| Mar 10, 2010 | 14 | 3 BR | $3,900,000 |
| Mar 11, 2010 | 14B | $3,200,000 | |
| Dec 22, 2009 | 2 3B | 4 BR | $1,300,000 |
| Apr 13, 2006 | 18 | 2 BRnon-market transfer (excluded from $/sf & trends) | $1,695,000 |
| Jun 24, 2004 | 12 | 2 BR | $4,995,000 |
| Jun 10, 2004 | 12B | $4,700,000 | |
| Oct 8, 2003 | 1819A | 3 BR | $3,500,000 |
Sales sourced from NYC Department of Finance recorded transfers (BBL 1-01349-0041) 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.
Put this data to work.
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.
Price to the building’s real trajectory, not a guess — we’ll position your line against its true comps to maximize the outcome.