Even if the sub-$600,000 range isn’t a total shock, keep in mind that’s the median price across the entire borough. Burgeoning hotspots like Williamsburg and Greenpoint far exceeded these numbers, growing to a median sale price of $849,000—an increase of nearly 25% since the same time last year—for condos. Clinton Hill at $689,000 wasn’t far behind but, perhaps, what’s more staggering is the 38% jump in price that reflects.
As a result, many prospective Brooklynites looked outside of the traditional post-Manhattan go-tos, exploring neighborhoods such as Fort Greene and Prospect Heights, who experienced similar lifts and median sale prices as that of Clinton Hill. Likewise, newcomers such as Bedford-Stuyvesant, Crown Heights and Bushwick jumped, too, hitting a median sale price of $450,000, a 19% jump year-over-year.
Where to next? These massive increases have led many to look in the suburbs, where home prices mirror that of Brooklyn rates—with, of course, the promise of more space and a host of other desirable amenities. In Westchester, the median home sale price for October 2013 – January 2014 ranged from $2.47 million in Waccabuc—a hamlet in the town of Lewisboro—to under $200,000 in Yorktown. Similarly in Nassau County, median sale prices for this period hit an unsurprising high of $2.61 million in posh Old Westbury, down to just under $300,000 in spots like Freeport, Elmont and Uniondale.
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