Tudor City Real Estate Market Trends

Market Overview for April, 2026


Median Sale Price

$342K

-19.4% YoY


Median Price/Sqft

-

-% YoY


No. of Transactions

10

11.1% YoY

Manhattan Median Sale Price

$1.3M

6% YoY

What is the median sale price and median price per sq ft in Tudor City?
The median home sale price in Tudor City as of April was $342K, down 19.4% year-over-year. A total of 10 assets were sold, representing a 11.1% growth compared to April last year. The median price per square foot was -, a -% YoY change. In April, the median home sale price in Manhattan was $1.3M.

Tudor City Median Sale Price

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Median Sale Price Per Square Feet

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Real Estate Transactions in Tudor City

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Top most expensive neighborhoods in Manhattan

Tudor City median price compared with other neighborhoods in Manhattan

Property values in Tudor City are lower compared to the borough of Tudor City overall.




Tudor City median price compared with all the neighborhoods in Manhattan

Neighborhood Borough Median Sale Price
Hudson Yards Manhattan $6,425,000
TriBeCa Manhattan $4,137,500
Hudson Square Manhattan $2,832,500
SoHo Manhattan $2,800,000
NoHo Manhattan $2,799,999
Flatiron District Manhattan $2,275,000
Upper West Side Manhattan $1,850,000
West Village Manhattan $1,820,000
Chelsea Manhattan $1,700,000
Carnegie Hill Manhattan $1,690,000
Greenwich Village Manhattan $1,687,500
Central Midtown Manhattan $1,660,000
Chinatown Manhattan $1,656,000
NoMad Manhattan $1,500,000
Gramercy Park Manhattan $1,427,500
Financial District Manhattan $1,413,000
Lincoln Square Manhattan $1,363,200
Garment District Manhattan $1,292,500
East Village Manhattan $1,235,000
Clinton - Hell's Kitchen Manhattan $1,175,000
Battery Park City Manhattan $1,150,000
Yorkville Manhattan $1,120,380
Lenox Hill Manhattan $1,110,000
Lower East Side Manhattan $1,074,500
Manhattan Valley Manhattan $1,050,000
Central Park South Manhattan $997,885
Two Bridges Manhattan $995,000
Turtle Bay Manhattan $925,000
Theatre District - Times Square Manhattan $917,500
Sutton Place Manhattan $887,000
East Harlem Manhattan $793,216
Murray Hill Manhattan $755,000
Morningside Heights Manhattan $705,000
Harlem Manhattan $655,000
Kips Bay Manhattan $643,500
Roosevelt Island Manhattan $570,000
Washington Heights Manhattan $533,245
Inwood Manhattan $470,000
Tudor City Manhattan $342,500

Residential Properties Sold in Tudor City

Property Type Median sale price Y-o-Y Median sale price/sqft Y-o-Y Transactions
Condos - - - - 0
Coops $342K -19.4% - - 10
Houses - - - - 0

Median coop sale price in Tudor City were $342K, a change of -19.4% year-over-year. There was no statistically significant data for median condo price and median house price activity for the period of April in Tudor City.

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Tudor City Neighborhood Guide

Tudor City was the vision of one man: developer Fred French, who in the 1920s saw middle class Manhattanites fleeing to newly developed suburbs and set out to create an urban Utopia on the island to keep them in place. Tudor City was the first residential skyscraper complex in the world when it opened in 1927. It was also the largest housing project ever undertaken in Manhattan up to that point. Tudor City featured such amenities as private gardens, tennis courts and a miniature golf course, which was all the rage in 1930. Residents enjoy the convenience of a food store, cleaners, restaurants and the like on the premises. The tiny neighborhood also includes a few Italianate holdovers from the days before the Fred French plan conversion.

Architecture and landmarks

Tudor City is packed with "tallest" and "firsts" and "bests." The Art Deco sensation, the Chrysler Building, resting comfortably in the pantheon of great American buildings, was the tallest building in the world when it was completed in the 1920s. The Socony-Mobil Building nearby was the world's first stainless steel skyscraper when it rose in 1955. Grand Central Station is the largest train terminal in the world by number of platforms. The Met Life Building was the largest commercial office building in the world when it opened in 1963, Trump World Tower was the tallest residential building in the world, the Waldorf Astoria was the largest hotel in the world and so on. Tudor City Gardens is its own historic district, a collection of 20 town houses each with a private garden that are woven around a common path. One long-time resident's love of horticulture led to the dedication of the Katharine Hepburn Garden in Dag Hammarskjold Plaza, honoring the four-time Academy Award-winning actress.

Transport

There are plenty of co-ops, mostly studios and one-bedroom options, in Tudor City, 4,081 in all. And condos, many in exclusive high-rises, are almost as prevalent with 4,030 units. 7,261 units are rentals. Seventy-eight buildings are for 1-2 families and another 90 are for 3-6 families. There are 296 retail units in the neighborhood. Sixty-one properties are classified as office buildings and 128 are mixed use.

Schools

The Mary Lindley Murray School, P.S. 116, and The River School handle elementary students living in Tudor City. Middle schoolers become Simon Baruch Lions on East 21st Street. High schoolers attend Norman Thomas High School, among others, where students can funnel into career-themed academies along pathways to post-secondary education.

Health

MedRite Urgent Care Center is a walk-in clinic on 2nd Avenue in Turtle Bay that offers a convenient alternative to emergency rooms in city hospitals.

Safety

Tudor City resides in the 17th Precinct of the NYPD. As a whole, there were 12.64 crimes per 1,000 residents in 2016, making the area safer than 85% of the neighborhoods in Manhattan. Save for one, all of the residential buildings sport 24-hour doorman service, so crime here is even less than reported in the precinct.

Things to do

Tudor City was designed to be a "city within a city." Its elevated ground serves to isolate the complex from the hustle and bustle around it. When you need to get out and experience Manhattan, Second Avenue is awash with stores and bars and restaurants.

Conrad's Bike Shop is a New York institution that has been building dream custom bikes in Tudor City since the 1970s. You can also stretch your legs on the East River Promenade. And if you need to stretch your political activism, there is often a protest going on outside the United Nations General Assembly that you can lend your voice to.

The green communal spaces at Tudor City were integral to the development of the project; their existence enabled the promoters to advertise the apartments as "a garden spot in the center of New York." The Tudor City Greens are still maintained as English-inspired gardens with winding paths, fountains and enticing benches. Although technically private, the gates are left open for public use. Robert Moses Playground, adjacent to Tudor City and the United Nations, offer sports courts, playground apparatus and dog-friendly space.