530 East 86th StreetRecorded sales & closing prices
530 East 86th Street, New York, NY 10028
25 recorded transfers, 2003–2024. Sortable and searchable below.
- Recent range
- $2.7M – $2.7M
- Listing discount
- 7.3%
- Recorded transfers
- 25
Not enough recent activity to price (shown for completeness, not quoted): 1BR — last traded 2015; 2BR — last traded 2012; 3BR — last traded 2021; 4BR+ — last traded 2024.
The complete recorded-sale history for 530 East 86th 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 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 $1.89M in the mid-2000s to about $2.88M 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.
Lines that traded more than once
The building’s appreciation arc, apartment by apartment — recorded prices, exact.
Every recorded sale
Sort any column; filter by unit or keyword. Prices are the recorded transfer amount at the NYC Department of Finance.
| Apartment | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apr 30, 2024 | 8C | 4 BR · 4 BA | $2,700,000 | -22.7% |
| Jun 29, 2021 | 5A | 3 BR · 2 BA | $2,875,000 | -8.7% |
| Jun 10, 2021 | 1D | $1,450,000 | — | |
| May 24, 2021 | 10A | 3 BR · 2.5 BA | $3,300,000 | -13.0% |
| Jan 24, 2020 | 14B | $1,850,000 | — | |
| Jun 27, 2019 | 9C | 4 BR · 3 BA | $4,000,000 | — |
| Oct 17, 2017 | 5C | 4 BR · 3 BA | $3,862,500 | -2.2% |
| May 17, 2016 | 6C | 3 BR · 4 BA | $3,978,090 | — |
| May 16, 2016 | 3C | 4 BR | $3,900,000 | -13.3% |
| Jul 22, 2015 | 12B | $1,900,000 | — | |
| Jan 15, 2015 | 1C | 1 BR · 1 BA | $623,470 | -7.6% |
| Jul 24, 2014 | 10A | 3 BR · 2.5 BA | $3,250,000 | — |
| Nov 6, 2012 | 7B | 2 BR · 2 BA | $1,850,000 | -7.3% |
| Oct 1, 2012 | 1/2AB | $2,800,000 | — | |
| Jun 22, 2012 | 3B | 3 BR | $2,200,000 | -3.3% |
| May 24, 2011 | 2A | 2 BR | $1,400,000 | — |
| Dec 4, 2009 | 9B | 2 BR | $1,873,550 | -6.1% |
| Apr 4, 2007 | 11C | 3 BR | $4,650,000 | -2.1% |
| Jul 24, 2006 | 2C | 3 BR | $1,885,000 | — |
| Nov 22, 2005 | 7B | 2 BRnon-market transfer (excluded from $/sf & trends) | $950,000 | — |
| Jun 10, 2005 | 5A | 3 BR | $2,500,000 | -6.9% |
| Nov 4, 2004 | 4B | $1,175,000 | — | |
| Feb 25, 2004 | 3B | 3 BR | $1,725,000 | -3.9% |
| Nov 19, 2003 | 13B | 2 BR | $1,495,000 | — |
| Oct 22, 2003 | 12A | 3 BR | $1,750,000 | — |
Sales sourced from NYC Department of Finance recorded transfers (BBL 1-01582-0034) 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.
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