Queens Village Real Estate Market Trends

Market Overview for April, 2026


Median Sale Price

$750K

11.1% YoY


Median Price/Sqft

$561

5.5% YoY


No. of Transactions

31

82.4% YoY

Queens Median Sale Price

$610K

3% YoY

What is the median sale price and median price per sq ft in Queens Village?
As of April, the median home sale price in Queens Village was $750K, up 11.1% year-over-year. A total of 31 properties traded, representing an 82.4% year-over-year increase. The median price per square foot in April was $561, a 5.5% YoY change. The median home sale price in Queens was $610K.

Queens Village Median Sale Price

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Median Sale Price Per Square Feet

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Real Estate Transactions in Queens Village

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Top most expensive neighborhoods in Queens

Queens Village median price compared with other neighborhoods in Queens

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




Queens Village median price compared with all the neighborhoods in Queens

Neighborhood Borough Median Sale Price
Jamaica Estates Queens $1,375,000
East Flushing Queens $1,250,000
Auburndale Queens $1,095,000
Fresh Meadows Queens $1,070,000
Belle Harbor Queens $1,020,000
Hunters Point Queens $987,499
Rockwood Park Queens $950,000
Whitestone Queens $913,912
Middle Village Queens $906,000
Bayside Queens $900,484
Glendale Queens $840,000
Ridgewood Queens $813,000
Bellerose Queens $805,000
South Astoria Queens $794,500
Cambria Heights Queens $778,000
Douglaston Queens $765,000
Brookville Queens $762,500
Floral Park Queens $755,000
Richmond Hill Queens $751,000
Queens Village Queens $750,000
South Ozone Park Queens $740,000
Woodhaven Queens $738,800
Old Astoria Queens $728,887
Hollis Queens $700,000
Ozone Park Queens $697,500
Rochdale Queens $689,000
College Point Queens $687,448
LIC Queens $685,000
Breezy Point Queens $675,000
Saint Albans Queens $660,000
Rosedale Queens $655,000
Springfield Gardens Queens $640,819
Laurelton Queens $640,000
Broad Channel Queens $635,000
Maspeth Queens $620,000
Downtown Flushing Queens $613,896
East Elmhurst Queens $595,000
Ditmars - Steinway Queens $565,110
Murray Hill Queens $532,500
Bay Terrace Queens $515,000
Rockaway Beach Queens $495,000
Sunnyside Queens $486,250
Jamaica Queens $477,450
Forest Hills Queens $452,500
Astoria Heights / Upper Ditmars Queens $442,500
Corona Queens $440,000
Rego Park Queens $436,010
Pomonok Queens $425,000
Arverne Queens $420,500
Woodside Queens $412,000
Rockaway Park Queens $410,000
Jackson Heights Queens $392,500
Glen Oaks Queens $386,400
Hollis Hills Queens $370,000
Little Neck Queens $357,000
Elmhurst Queens $348,000
Kew Gardens Hills Queens $345,000
Kew Gardens Queens $336,500
Oakland Gardens Queens $312,500
Briarwood Queens $305,000
Lindenwood Queens $240,000
Jamaica Hills Queens $185,000

Residential Properties Sold in Queens Village

Property Type Median sale price Y-o-Y Median sale price/sqft Y-o-Y Transactions
Condos - - - - 0
Coops - - - - 0
Houses $750K 11.1% $561 5.5% 31

The median house sale price in Queens Village in April was $750K, up 11.1% year-over-year. There was no statistically significant data for median condo price and median coop price activity for the period of April in Queens Village.

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Queens Village Neighborhood Guide

It is a familiar American tale: railroad arrives, commercial center develops, town grows up around it. Except you normally find that story on the American Great Plains and not New York City. But that is the story of Queen's Village after the railroad arrived in 1837. In the 1920s a housing boom fueled by commuters to Manhattan's new Penn Station arrived, and developers swooped in on Queens Village. There was great growth but the neighborhood remains as it ever was - a quiet small town, with a commercial core and surrounding streets of well-kept houses. Queens Village earns its moniker of "village" honestly.

Architecture and landmarks

Those early 20th century Queens Village developers seldom strayed from the best-selling formula of Colonial Revival and English Tudor Revival houses, dropped onto tracts of 30-by-100 foot lots. There is also an occasional manor-style house in Queens Village, whose housing stock is considered to be a generation older than many of the surrounding neighborhoods. The locals call the Queens Reformed Church on Springfield Boulevard the "Old White Church" since it is the oldest church in town, built in the Greek Revival style in 1858. Antun's Banquet Hall on Springfield Boulevard has hosted Queens Village weddings for longer than most residents can remember; in its early days it was the Commercial House, a hangout for America's greatest horsemen.

Transport

Queens Village commuters set their clocks by the 7:42 train on the Long Island Rail Road Hempstead Branch that pulls into Manhattan's Penn Station 32 minutes later. The express bus service on the X68 line takes about an hour to reach Midtown. The neighborhood is well-served by local bus lines, including along Hillside Avenue which delivers riders to the terminus of the F train in Jamaica.

Schools

Queens Village commuters set their clocks by the 7:42 train on the Long Island Rail Road Hempstead Branch that pulls into Manhattan's Penn Station 32 minutes later. The express bus service on the X68 line takes about an hour to reach Midtown. The neighborhood is well-served by local bus lines, including along Hillside Avenue which delivers riders to the terminus of the F train in Jamaica.

Health

There are many private clinics available in the neighborhood for general and specialized treatment. The Jamaica Hospital Medical Center, a straight shot down Hillside Avenue, is the most convenient general hospital.

Safety

The welfare of Queens Village residents is the responsibility of the 105th Precinct. With 9.27 crimes reported per 1,000 residents in 2016, it ranks in the highest quintile of safety in New York City.

Things to do

There are convenient shopping and dining options in the village center along Jamaica Avenue. Indian restaurants dominate the landscape along Hillside Avenue; Radhani's is a standout. Alley Pond Park is the second largest park in Queens. Geologically, the pond is a souvenir of the last Ice Age 15,000 years ago.

Today it is a popular destination for nature outings and birdwatching; for active recreation there are ballfields and the Alley Pond Adventure Course with a rock wall and ropes. The Long Island Motor Parkway Trail is another relic of the past - a racetrack constructed in the 1800s by the world's wealthiest family, the Vanderbilts. It is now a shady bike path that links Cunningham Park, Alley Pond Park and Kissena Park.

The Living Museum at Creedmoor Psychiatric Center is a public display of contemporary art from the patients of the rambling hospital in the neighborhood's north end; it was started back in 1983. For those so inclined, Belmont Park, one of the world's great horse racing tracks, is on the eastern doorstep of Queens Village on Hempstead Avenue.