Buildings·The Umbria·Sold prices

465 West End AvenueRecorded sales & closing prices

465 West End Avenue, New York, NY 10024

35 recorded transfers, 2004–2025. Sortable and searchable below.

2BR
$1.95M
median of 3 recent · '23–'25
Recent range
$1.07M – $2.4M
all types, last 4 yrs
Listing discount
10.0%
median, from last ask
Recorded transfers
35
2004–2025 on record

Not enough recent activity to price (shown for completeness, not quoted): Studio — last traded 2023; 3BR — last traded 2022; 4BR+ — last traded 2024.

The complete recorded-sale history for The Umbria, 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

2025-10 · 2BR
10B  $2,242,500
2024-08 · 2BR
11A  $1,950,000
2024-02 · 4BR+
4C  $2,400,000
2023-10 · 2BR
7B  $1,845,000
2023-08 · Studio
3B  $1,069,163
2022-09 · 3BR
4B  $2,100,000

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 3 sales
$1,950,000
+0%

And by floor

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

Floors 6–10 3 sales
$1,950,000
+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 $995K in the mid-2000s to about $1.95M 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.

$800K$1.6M$2.4M'04'15'2510B · $2,242,500 · '2511A · $1,950,000 · '247B · $1,845,000 · '2310B · $2,150,000 · '2110B · $2,250,000 · '181B · $1,110,000 · '1512D · $1,830,000 · '1410B · $1,649,000 · '1412D · $1,780,000 · '081B · $895,000 · '0712D · $995,000 · '04

Lines that traded more than once

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

10B+36%
$1,649,000 2014$2,250,000 2018$2,150,000 2021$2,242,500 2025
1B+24%
$895,000 2007$1,110,000 2015
2A+19%
$3,100,000 2006$2,900,000 2011$3,700,000 2017
7A-1%
$3,650,000 2006$3,600,000 2021
4B-2%
$2,150,000 2011$2,100,000 2022
3B-54%
$2,306,000 2005$1,069,163 2023

Every recorded sale

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

35 recorded sales
Apartment
Oct 7, 202510B2 BR · 2 BA$2,242,500-12.1%
Aug 14, 202411A2 BR · 2 BA$1,950,000-1.3%
Feb 7, 20244C4 BR · 3 BA$2,400,000-2.0%
Oct 13, 20237B2 BR · 2 BA$1,845,000-10.0%
Aug 15, 20233BStudio$1,069,163
Sep 12, 20224B3 BR · 2 BA$2,100,000-6.7%
Jun 8, 202110B2 BR · 2 BA$2,150,000-6.5%
May 6, 20217A5 BR · 3 BA$3,600,000-7.7%
Nov 6, 202012D3 BR · 2 BA$1,975,000-1.0%
Jul 28, 20203C4 BR · 2.5 BA$2,700,000+8.2%
Jan 16, 202011D3 BR · 2 BA$1,650,000-2.9%
Jul 31, 20198B3 BR · 2 BA$2,450,000+2.3%
Jul 16, 20197C3 BR · 2 BA$2,075,000-27.2%
Apr 16, 201810B2 BR$2,250,000-9.8%
May 4, 20172A4 BR$3,700,000-7.4%
Jul 9, 20151B2 BR$1,110,000+0.9%
Jan 30, 20151A4 BR · 3 BA$3,550,000-7.1%
Oct 23, 201412D2 BR$1,830,000-14.9%
May 13, 201411C3 BR · 2 BA$2,675,000+16.6%
Apr 24, 20141C4 BR$2,727,000+1.0%
Apr 23, 201410B2 BR$1,649,000
Feb 19, 20146A3 BR$3,587,500-10.2%
Jan 18, 20122C4 BR$2,775,000-5.9%
Aug 18, 20114B3 BR$2,150,000-6.5%
Jun 23, 20112A4 BR$2,900,000-10.8%
Sep 12, 20085BStudio$1,200,000
Jul 21, 200812D2 BR$1,780,000-3.8%
Jun 22, 200710C5 BR · 3.5 BA$2,863,640
Jan 11, 20071B2 BR$895,000-0.4%
Nov 14, 20062A4 BR · 3 BA$3,100,000-8.7%
Aug 1, 20066B$2,550,000
Jul 11, 20067A5 BR · 3 BA$3,650,000+7.5%
Jul 14, 20053BStudio$2,306,000
Apr 22, 200412D2 BR$995,000
Nov 19, 20032A4 BRnon-market transfer (excluded from $/sf & trends)$1,995,000

Sales sourced from NYC Department of Finance recorded transfers (BBL 1-01245-0019) 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 The Umbria?

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Buying here

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Selling here

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