Bellerose Real Estate Market Trends

Market Overview for January, 2025


Median Sale Price

$704K

15.7% YoY


Median Price/Sqft

$639

23.9% YoY


No. of Transactions

21

31.3% YoY

Queens Median Sale Price

$590K

10% YoY

What is the median sale price and median price per sq ft in Bellerose?
As of January, the median home sale price in Bellerose was $704K, up 15.7% year-over-year. A total of 21 properties traded, representing a 31.3% year-over-year increase. The median price per square foot in January was $639, a 23.9% YoY change. The median home sale price in Queens was $590K.

Bellerose Median Sale Price

View: GraphTable

Median Sale Price Per Square Feet

View: Graph Table

Real Estate Transactions in Bellerose

View: Graph Table

Top most expensive neighborhoods in Queens

Bellerose median price compared with other neighborhoods in Queens

Bellerose property values are on the higher-end for neighborhoods in Queens .




Bellerose median price compared with all the neighborhoods in Queens

Neighborhood Borough Median Sale Price
Malba Queens $1,320,000
Belle Harbor Queens $1,235,000
Jamaica Estates Queens $995,000
Hollis Hills Queens $990,000
Hunters Point Queens $989,500
Auburndale Queens $978,000
Old Astoria Queens $960,000
Rockwood Park Queens $948,000
Pomonok Queens $888,000
Fresh Meadows Queens $877,500
Floral Park Queens $874,500
Glendale Queens $835,000
LIC Queens $822,345
East Flushing Queens $821,500
Middle Village Queens $797,500
Queens Village Queens $765,000
Old Howard Beach Queens $705,000
Bellerose Queens $704,500
College Point Queens $693,500
Queensboro Hill Queens $692,410
Cambria Heights Queens $677,500
Rochdale Queens $674,000
Breezy Point Queens $665,000
Saint Albans Queens $663,900
Hollis Queens $663,000
South Astoria Queens $660,000
Rosedale Queens $655,000
Richmond Hill Queens $645,000
Ozone Park Queens $645,000
Maspeth Queens $641,748
South Ozone Park Queens $640,000
Laurelton Queens $640,000
Woodhaven Queens $637,500
Jamaica Queens $637,128
Bayside Queens $633,500
Springfield Gardens Queens $630,000
Rockaway Park Queens $552,500
Murray Hill Queens $520,000
Broad Channel Queens $490,000
Downtown Flushing Queens $486,720
Elmhurst Queens $474,000
Jackson Heights Queens $460,000
Hamilton Beach Queens $459,000
Far Rockaway Queens $452,000
Forest Hills Queens $447,500
Astoria Heights / Upper Ditmars Queens $447,500
Sunnyside Queens $440,000
Kew Gardens Hills Queens $425,000
Whitestone Queens $425,000
Douglaston Queens $420,000
Bay Terrace Queens $409,000
Seaside Queens $399,000
Sunnyside Gardens Queens $375,000
Woodside Queens $367,500
Glen Oaks Queens $354,950
East Elmhurst Queens $350,000
Rego Park Queens $348,500
Kew Gardens Queens $347,500
Oakland Gardens Queens $330,000
Little Neck Queens $330,000
Briarwood Queens $318,500
Lindenwood Queens $297,000
Corona Queens $276,500
Jamaica Hills Queens $125,000

Residential Properties Sold in Bellerose

Property Type Median sale price Y-o-Y Median sale price/sqft Y-o-Y Transactions
Condos - - - - 0
Coops $244K -18.7% - - 8
Houses $745K -6.2% $639 22.3% 12

The median house sale price in Bellerose in January was $745K, down 6.2% year-over-year. Median coop sale price in Bellerose was $244K, a change of -18.7% year-over-year. There was no statistically significant data for median condo price activity for the period of January in Bellerose.

Discover market trends in other boroughs in New York City

Discover market trends in other popular cities across the U.S

Fair use and redistribution

We encourage and freely grant you permission to reuse and repost the information, charts and images found in this report. When doing so, we only ask that you link back to this page, or PropertyShark.com.

Bellerose Neighborhood Guide

The quirky 15.5-mile border between Queens and Nassau County that runs from the Long Island Sound in the north to the Atlantic Ocean in the south was put in place when New York City consolidated in 1898. The border side-stepped some neighborhoods and others, like Bellerose, it just blasted through. The division did not cause residents to alter their country ways (the area was mostly gladiola fields at the time) and go all big-city - but, in 1924, the part of the neighborhood on the Nassau side of the line incorporated as Bellerose Village to guard against any unwanted development pressure from the city side. The development that came to Bellerose after World War II was led by veterans looking for safe streets upon which to raise families, and the neighborhood remains a residential suburb that happens to lie in the jurisdiction of the city.

Architecture and landmarks

Folks in Bellerose still lament the passing of the quintessential mid-20th century suburban landmark - the AMF Bellerose Bowling Center, a bowling alley on Jamaica Road which closed about a decade ago. But the Padavan-Preller baseball-softball complex on Hillside Avenue, with nine diamonds, is still going strong. Down the road is another cherished destination - the Cross Island YMCA that has served two and three generations of Bellerose families since 1965. The housing stock where all those bowling enthusiasts lived proliferates with single-family homes: sturdy two-bedroom Capes and larger Colonials and the occasional Tudor. It is not impossible to find some of the traditional housing torn down and replaced with larger contemporary models.

Transport

The subway does not quite reach as far west as Bellerose, but you can take a short drive or ride to the terminus of the F Line. The bus lines take up to an hour on average to reach Manhattan. The Hempstead Line of the Long Island Rail Road will deliver you to Pennsylvania Station in about one half hour (the Bellerose Station is across the county line in Nassau).

Schools

Bellerose schools are considered top notch, on a par with the nearby Nassau County schools. Elementary students in P.S. 186 and P.S. 133 are consistently high performers and neighborhood kids can also access high-achieving Public School/Intermediate School 266 in Glen Oaks, part of District 26. Other junior high schools include Louis Pasteur Middle School 67 in Little Neck and Irwin Altman Middle School 172 in Floral Park. The public schools feed two high schools: the long-established Martin Van Buren High School and the new Queens High School of Teaching, Liberal Arts and Sciences, which conducted its first classes earlier this century.

Health

A branch of New York Urgent Care operates in Bellerose on Jericho Turnpike just off the Cross Island Expressway; it is open every day until evenings with an on-site lab, x-ray facilities, and EKG capability. Just north of Bellerose is the Long Island Jewish Medical Center, a non-profit teaching center with over 500 physicians overseeing a wide range of care and programs.

Safety

Bellerose is the province of the 105th Precinct that reported 9.27 crimes per 1,000 residents in 2016, making the neighborhood one of New York City's safest.

Things to do

Bellerose got its name because this was Joseph Rose's farm long ago and his daughter was named Belle. So it is appropriate that one of the go-to activities for neighborhood residents is a trip to the Queens County Farm Museum, a working farm since 1697 and the city's largest piece of cropland. The museum serves up such family entertainments as a petting zoo, magic shows, an interactive corn field adventure and country and western dances for the older folks.

Just south of Bellerose the horses have other things on their mind - North America's first horse races were held here in 1665 and today's Belmont Park is the largest dirt oval and grandstand in the world for those who like to bet on the equine athletes.

Everyone in Bellerose - and surrounding communities - marks the calendar for the date of St. Gregory the Great's Festival each summer. The ten-day celebration on 87th Avenue has been a Bellerose institution for over 35 years. Residents can shop for necessities and find neighborhood restaurants along Jamaica Avenue.