Market Overview for April, 2026
Median Sale Price
72.8% YoY
Median Price/Sqft
69.6% YoY
No. of Transactions
600% YoY
Brooklyn Median Sale Price
3% YoY
What is the median sale price and median price per sq ft in Madison?
As of April, the median home sale price in Madison was $985K, up 72.8% year-over-year.
A total of 7 properties traded, representing a 600% year-over-year increase.
The median price per square foot in April was $947, a 69.6% YoY change.
The median home sale price in Brooklyn was $850K.
Top most expensive neighborhoods in Brooklyn
Madison median price compared with other neighborhoods in Brooklyn
Madison property values are on the higher-end for neighborhoods in Brooklyn .
Madison 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 |
| Ditmas Park | Brooklyn | $853,500 |
| Downtown Brooklyn | 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 Madison
| Property Type | Median sale price | Y-o-Y | Median sale price/sqft | Y-o-Y | Transactions |
| Condos | $420K | -26.3% | $730 | 30.7% | 1 |
| Coops | - | - | - | - | 0 |
| Houses | $1.3M | - | $971 | - | 5 |
The median house sale price in Madison in April was relatively flat year-over-year at $1.3M. However, median condo prices in Madison trended down 26.3% year-over-year to $420K. There was no statistically significant data for median coop price activity for the period of April in Madison.
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Madison Neighborhood Guide
Schools are important to a neighborhood but seldom are they responsible for a neighborhood's very existence. But that is the case with Madison in southern Brooklyn. James Madison High School was raised in 1925 as a central spot to educate the young'uns who were spread out on surrounding farms. But as Brooklynites stopped farming, the fields around the high school filled in with homes, mostly single family affairs on roomy lots. Once considered a slice of Sheepshead Bay, Madison established its own identity as a neighborhood - almost exclusively residential except on the fringes of its 12 Brooklyn blocks.
Architecture and landmarks
Many of the neat and trim houses in the core of Madison were constructed as mini-haciendas in the Spanish Revival style with stucco cladding and red tile roofs. For landmarks, start with James Madison High School, an imposing five-story Neo-Colonial structure taller than the surrounding shade trees and anything else in Madison. The roster of the school's graduates is as eclectic and impressive as any in the city: United States Senators Bernie Sanders and Charles Schumer, four Nobel Prize winners, Academy Award-winning actor Martin Landau, would-be Academy Award-winning actor Andrew Dice Clay, singer-songwriter extraordinaire Carole King, Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and television justice Judy Sheindlin. Beyond that there is the Wyckoff-Bennett Homestead on Kings Highway, considered to be built in 1766 (the date is gouged into a wooden beam inside) in the Dutch Colonial style.
Transport
The subway misses little Madison, but not by much. The Q Line is at most a 15-minute walk on the leafy neighborhood streets to Queens Highway. The Q express train requires 40 minutes to reach Manhattan. It is a two-ticketer to board the 2 and 5 lines - the terminus in Flatbush a couple of miles away. The MTA buses rolling on the residential streets will whisk you to more commercial parts of the city as well.
Schools
The regal James Madison High, built for 4,000 students, stands alone as the only school in the neighborhood. Most elementary and intermediate school students migrate east to P.S. 222 in the Marine Park neighborhood and there are also several nearby parochial schools.
Health
New York Community Hospital was founded by local physician brothers Albert and Dudley Fritz on Kings Highway as Madison Park Hospital in 1929. Today it is a non-profit, 134-bed facility offering emergency, medical and surgical care.
Safety
Madison is part of the beat for the 61st Precinct. In the past year 8.6254 crimes per 1,000 residents were reported, ranking the neighborhood in the top fifth for safety in New York City.
Things to do
For most Madison residents trimming the hedges and washing the car in their spacious driveway is high on the list of things to do. A bite to eat and shopping are usually a short walk away in the small retail pockets in the neighborhood. Expect only mom-and-pop family businesses.
A favorite destination for generations has been Jomart Chocolates on Avenue R where they have been dipping marshmallows, butter crunch and nut brittle by hand since 1961; the Rojak family started JoMart in 1946. A branch of the Brooklyn Public Library draws plenty of patronage from the neighborhood.
There is usually ample greenspace in the backyard but when residents want a little more there are the walking trails and access to Jamaica Bay a short distance away in Marine Park.