Market Overview for April, 2026
Median Sale Price
-29% YoY
Median Price/Sqft
2.6% YoY
No. of Transactions
-20% YoY
Brooklyn Median Sale Price
3% YoY
What is the median sale price and median price per sq ft in Flatbush?
In April, the median home sale price in Flatbush was $440K, down 29% year-over-year.
There were a total of 8 transactions, representing a 20% drop compared to April last year.
The median price per square foot was $609, a 2.6% YoY change.
In April, the median home sale price in Brooklyn was $850K.
Top most expensive neighborhoods in Brooklyn
Flatbush median price compared with other neighborhoods in Brooklyn
Property values in Flatbush are lower compared to the borough of Flatbush overall.
Flatbush median price compared with all the neighborhoods in Brooklyn
| Neighborhood | Borough | Median Sale Price |
|---|---|---|
| Carroll Gardens | Brooklyn | $2,500,000 |
| DUMBO | Brooklyn | $2,405,000 |
| Park Slope | Brooklyn | $1,900,000 |
| Boerum Hill | Brooklyn | $1,637,500 |
| Prospect Heights | Brooklyn | $1,622,000 |
| Greenpoint | Brooklyn | $1,574,900 |
| Brooklyn Heights | Brooklyn | $1,360,000 |
| Williamsburg | Brooklyn | $1,245,000 |
| Gowanus | Brooklyn | $1,200,000 |
| Greenwood Heights | Brooklyn | $1,195,000 |
| Borough Park | Brooklyn | $1,149,500 |
| Windsor Terrace | Brooklyn | $1,125,000 |
| Crown Heights | Brooklyn | $1,124,999 |
| Bedford-Stuyvesant | Brooklyn | $1,082,500 |
| Wingate | Brooklyn | $1,077,500 |
| Manhattan Beach | Brooklyn | $1,037,500 |
| Madison | Brooklyn | $985,000 |
| Bath Beach | Brooklyn | $970,000 |
| Clinton Hill | Brooklyn | $925,000 |
| Ocean Hill | Brooklyn | $885,000 |
| Homecrest | Brooklyn | $877,500 |
| Downtown Brooklyn | Brooklyn | $853,500 |
| Ditmas Park | Brooklyn | $853,500 |
| Bushwick | Brooklyn | $845,000 |
| Fort Greene | Brooklyn | $775,000 |
| Marine Park | Brooklyn | $772,500 |
| Prospect - Lefferts Gardens | Brooklyn | $765,000 |
| Dyker Heights | Brooklyn | $751,843 |
| East Flatbush | Brooklyn | $725,000 |
| Cobble Hill | Brooklyn | $710,000 |
| Kensington | Brooklyn | $651,680 |
| Bensonhurst | Brooklyn | $620,000 |
| Old Mill Basin | Brooklyn | $600,000 |
| Brownsville | Brooklyn | $584,000 |
| Bay Ridge | Brooklyn | $530,440 |
| Sunset Park | Brooklyn | $527,500 |
| Brighton Beach | Brooklyn | $500,000 |
| Canarsie | Brooklyn | $494,000 |
| Gravesend | Brooklyn | $485,000 |
| Gerritsen Beach | Brooklyn | $484,500 |
| East New York | Brooklyn | $476,455 |
| Midwood | Brooklyn | $460,580 |
| Sheepshead Bay | Brooklyn | $450,000 |
| Flatbush | Brooklyn | $440,000 |
| Coney Island | Brooklyn | $395,000 |
| Georgetown | Brooklyn | $321,000 |
| Flatlands | Brooklyn | $280,000 |
Residential Properties Sold in Flatbush
| Property Type | Median sale price | Y-o-Y | Median sale price/sqft | Y-o-Y | Transactions |
| Condos | $595K | 8.2% | $785 | 25.1% | 1 |
| Coops | $276K | 6.2% | - | - | 3 |
| Houses | $595K | -27.7% | $432 | -26.3% | 4 |
The median house sale price in Flatbush in April was $595K, down 27.7% year-over-year. Conversely, median condo prices in Flatbush trended up 8.2% year-over-year to $595K. Median coop sale price in Flatbush were $276K, a change of 6.2% year-over-year.
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Flatbush Neighborhood Guide
In many ways Flatbush is the prototypical Brooklyn neighborhood. This is where the beloved Brooklyn Dodgers played baseball in Ebbetts Field. They were "da bums" to everyone in Flatbush, where the local accent stood in for all of Brooklyn. Sylvester Stallone and Henry Winkler made their first Hollywood splashes in a movie about 1950s leather-clad teenagers in The Lords of Flatbush that showed Brooklyn to the world. The working-class neighborhood was mostly the province of Italian-Americans and Irish-Americans back in those days. These days the vibe is mostly West Indian and African-American but Flatbush is still a place where folks wake up each day and chase a paycheck for an honest day's work.
Architecture and landmarks
Ebbetts Field has been torn down and gone for half a century but there are residents in Flatbush who still mourn its passing. Kings Theatre, a Baroque-styled movie palace from the 1920s, was abandoned as well but it dodged the wrecking ball and re-opened on Flatbush Avenue as a performing arts venue in 2015. Housing stock in Flatbush runs the gamut from Victorians to Colonial-style pre-war apartment buildings to Tudor-flavored townhouses. Institutional architecture in the neighborhood is particularly eye-catching. Flatbush Town Hall (now a public school) from the 1870s on Snyder Avenue is designed in a High Victorian Gothic style with a distinctive corner bell tower. Nearby Erasmus Hall High School appears to have time-traveled from the Dutch Renaissance and neighbor Flatbush Reformed Protestant Dutch Church, fashioned from stone, dates from the 1790s.
Transport
The B and Q trains of the BMT Brighton Line stop frequently in the neighborhood and the 2 and 5 trains of the IRT Nostrand Avenue Line are easily accessible within Flatbush with Manhattan a little more than a half hour away. Bus services are plentiful in Flatbush as well.
Schools
Flatbush is well-served by public elementary and middle schools, advancing students towards Erasmus Hall High School, which has been on the job since 1786. The sprawling building has been broken up into five smaller specialty high schools.
Health
Brookdale University Hospital and Medical Center in the heart of Flatbush is a busy place, with primary and secondary care provided for a service area of one million residents.
Safety
As reported by the 70th Precinct, Flatbush ranks in the top quintile for safety in New York City with 10.30 crimes per 1,000 residents.
Things to do
While you still may be able to find a neighborhood bar with patrons to commiserate with over the loss of the Brooklyn Dodgers back in 1958, it is Caribbean fare that is most often on the menu in Flatbush these days. If you want to try your hand at Caribbean cooking, stop in to the Flatbush Caton Market or at one of the many produce shops along Flatbush Avenue.
You can team that spicy dinner up with a show at the revived King's Theatre or the Brooklyn Center for the Performing Arts on the Brooklyn College campus. The school grounds in the southern end of the neighborhood are a leafy respite from the busy borough as well.
Neighboring Prospect Park at the northern end is one of the great urban greenspaces in the nation.