Guides · Buying

Should I Rent or Buy in Manhattan? (The Framework, Not the Answer)

The rent-vs-buy decision in Manhattan — the inputs that matter, the math most people get wrong, and the framework that produces a real answer.

By Corey Cohen, Principal of The Roebling Team at Compass · May 1, 2026

In most Manhattan neighborhoods at today's mortgage rates and rent levels, buying breaks even with renting somewhere between year 4 and year 7 — assuming you stay put, the apartment doesn't sit on the market when you sell, and you actually use your tax deductions.

Below that horizon, renting almost always wins. Above it, buying almost always wins. The decision isn't the calculation; the decision is whether you can confidently say you'll be in this apartment past your break-even year.

What Manhattan rent-vs-buy math actually includes

Four moving parts make Manhattan rent-vs-buy math meaningfully different from the rest of the country:

  1. Closing costs are 3 to 5% on the way in (vs. 1 to 2% in most markets), and 6%+ on the way out if you list with a broker. That's a 9 to 11% transaction cost on the round trip — a material drag on short-horizon math.
  2. Co-op maintenance and condo common charges behave like rent — they rise annually, you don't get them back, and they're a meaningful portion of total monthly cost.
  3. The mansion tax cliff at $1M adds 1% to closing costs before any other analysis begins, with progressively higher rates above $2M, $3M, $5M, and so on up to 3.9% above $25M.
  4. Property tax in newer condos is often abated under 421-a and rises significantly when the abatement expires — typically a 5- to 10-year inflection that changes the carrying-cost picture meaningfully.

Run the math with the full local inputs and the Manhattan break-even point typically lands somewhere in years 4 to 7 — almost never at year 3, despite what shorter-form analyses often suggest.

The actual framework: five questions

Question 1: How long will you stay?

This is the only question that really matters. Every year you own, your equity grows from principal paydown and (hopefully) appreciation. But you paid 4 to 5% to buy and you'll pay 6%+ to sell. You need enough years for equity growth to absorb that 10%+ round-trip cost.

  • In a flat market: about 7 years
  • With 2 to 3% annual appreciation: about 5 years
  • With 5%+ appreciation: 3 years
  • In a soft market with prices flat or declining: you can be underwater for 10 years

If you can't say with confidence you'll be in this apartment for 5+ years, rent.

→ Want to put real numbers behind this? Use the Manhattan Rent vs Buy Calculator — it bakes in mansion tax, mortgage recording tax (condos), co-op flip tax, transfer taxes at sale, and the SALT cap that eats most NYC property-tax deductions.

Question 2: What's the all-in monthly cost on both options?

You can't compare rent to "mortgage payment."

  • Renting all-in: rent, renters insurance, broker fee amortized
  • Buying all-in: mortgage P&I, maintenance/common charges, property tax, homeowners insurance, building reserves and assessments, and opportunity cost on your down payment (the line almost everyone forgets — if you put $400,000 down at conservative assumptions that's $16,000 to $20,000 per year of forgone return, or $1,400 to $1,700 per month).

Question 3: Do you actually get the tax benefits?

The standard buy case includes mortgage interest deduction and property tax deduction. Two reasons that may not apply:

  • You take the standard deduction (many buyers no longer itemize)
  • The SALT cap means NYC residents already hit the cap from state and city income tax alone

Run the math on your actual federal tax liability, not a broker's slide.

Question 4: Do you want optionality or stability?

Renting gives you optionality. Buying gives you stability. If you don't yet know what your life looks like in three years, that's not a buy market for you personally, regardless of macroeconomics.

Question 5: Are you really going to buy, or are you going to keep looking?

Honest answer wins.

When the math is clearer than usual

Almost certainly rent if:

  • Time horizon under 3 years
  • No down payment saved and no path to one in the next 12 months
  • You're not sure you'll keep your current job
  • Your employer might relocate you
  • You haven't lived in NYC long enough to know which neighborhood you actually want

Almost certainly buy (if you can afford it) if:

  • Time horizon 7+ years
  • Down payment plus 12 months reserves comfortably available
  • Stable predictable income
  • You know the neighborhood and have walked it on weekends and weekdays
  • You're not banking on appreciation

Genuinely depends if:

  • Time horizon 4 to 6 years
  • Down payment doable but tight
  • Monthly numbers within 30% of each other
  • Market in transition

The mistakes to avoid

  • Don't buy because you're tired of renting (the most expensive emotion in NYC real estate).
  • Don't rent because you're scared — if your time horizon supports buying, fear of rates or markets doesn't change the answer.

Worksheet — before you ask any broker (including me) anything else

Fill in:

  • Realistic time horizon in this apartment: ___ years
  • Total monthly cost renting: $___
  • Total monthly cost buying (P&I + maintenance + tax + insurance + opportunity cost): $___
  • Down payment available: $___
  • Closing-cost cash on top of down payment: $___
  • 12-month post-closing reserves required: $___
  • Do you itemize on your federal return? Yes/No
  • Are you confident in the neighborhood for 7+ years? Yes/No
  • Could you handle a flat or down market for 5 years without needing to sell? Yes/No

If most answers are clean and the math looks marginal, the right move is usually to wait. If most are confident and the math says buying makes sense, move.


If you want to walk through the math on a specific apartment versus a specific rental — including what changes if rates drop, if the building has a 421-a expiration, or if you need to time the mansion tax — call or text 646.939.7375. The math is what it is, but applying it to your actual situation is where I add the most value.

Part of: Buying an Apartment in Manhattan: The 2026 Guide (Costs, Co-ops, & LL97)

Specific situation? Let's talk.

Corey Cohen
Corey Cohen
Principal · The Roebling Team at Compass
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