Tudor Realty Services

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At a glance

Firm: Tudor Realty Services Corp. — part of FirstService Residential Type: New York City co-op and condominium managing agent — full-service residential property management, with an in-house residential and commercial brokerage Founded: 1990, New York City Portfolio: Per the firm's materials, management of more than 90 residential cooperative and condominium buildings across New York City, plus brokerage and advisory services Ownership: Acquired by FirstService Residential in January 2023; per the acquisition announcement, the existing Tudor management team continued to oversee day-to-day property operations Headquarters: 250 Park Avenue South, New York, NY (per the firm's website) Focus: Co-op and condominium management, long-term capital and budget planning, and advisory work; the brokerage arm handles residential sales and rentals and commercial office and retail leasing Official website: tudorrealty.com — see the site's contact page Status: Active managing agent; part of FirstService Residential as of this writing Source: The Roebling Team at Compass — compiled from the firm's public materials and building records on file. July 2026.


Who Tudor Realty Services is

Tudor Realty Services Corp. is a New York City co-op and condominium managing agent founded in 1990. It operates as a full-service firm: property management on one side and, on the other, an in-house brokerage handling residential sales and rentals and commercial office and retail leasing. Per the firm's own materials, it manages more than 90 residential cooperative and condominium buildings across the city, with an emphasis on long-term capital planning, budgeting, and project prioritization for the boards it serves.

In January 2023, Tudor Realty Services was acquired by FirstService Residential, one of the largest residential property managers in New York. Per the acquisition announcement, the existing Tudor management team continued to oversee day-to-day operations after the transaction. For a buyer or seller, that structure is worth understanding: the building-level contact and service generally remain a local Tudor matter, while certain back-office, technology, and platform resources now sit within a larger national organization. Because Tudor also runs a brokerage, it is worth confirming, on any given deal, which role the firm is playing — managing agent, listing broker, or both — since that affects who holds which information.

Management assignments change over time, and a firm this size adds and loses buildings from year to year. Treat any specific building assignment as something to confirm with the building and the managing agent as part of diligence.

Common diligence questions

These are the questions we ask on a buyer's or seller's behalf when a building is managed by Tudor Realty Services. They are prompts for diligence, not claims about this firm's practices — answers vary by building and change over time.

  • Board-package turnaround: How long is management currently taking to review a completed purchase application and schedule a board interview, and what is the realistic window from submission to a closing-ready approval?
  • Access to financials, reserves, and minutes: What financial statements, current budget, reserve position, and board-meeting minutes will management release to a purchaser's attorney, and how quickly?
  • Responsiveness and staffing: Which property manager is assigned to the building, and how is on-site staffing structured (resident manager/superintendent, doorman/concierge coverage) versus what is handled off-site at the management office?
  • Managing agent versus broker role: Because the firm runs both a management company and a brokerage, which role is it playing on this transaction, and does that change who holds the building's financial and application information?
  • Closing, waiver, and move-in handling: How does the agent process the recognition/waiver of the right of first refusal (co-op) or the waiver of the right of first refusal (condo), closing scheduling, and move-in coordination, including any deposits, fees, and required lead time?
  • Assessments and capital projects: Are any current or anticipated capital assessments, Local Law 11/facade, elevator, or mechanical projects on the books, and how are they being funded?
  • Flip-tax and COI administration: If the building has a flip tax (transfer fee), how is it calculated and collected at closing — and what are the current insurance and certificate-of-insurance requirements for owners, contractors, and movers?

Buying or selling in a Tudor Realty Services building?

We publish management-company profiles because the managing agent shapes the parts of a transaction a buyer or seller actually feels — how fast a board package moves, what the financials disclose, and how a closing gets scheduled. The Roebling Team at Compass tracks Manhattan's co-op and condo inventory building by building and brings that context to every deal.

Buying or selling in a building managed by Tudor Realty Services? Request building-specific guidance →

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


Management-company assignments, building policies, contacts and procedures can change. Buyers and sellers should verify current information with the building, managing agent, board materials, and counsel. This page reflects publicly available information and building records on file; The Roebling Team at Compass does not represent Tudor Realty Services. © 2026 The Roebling Team at Compass.