New York Top Real Estate Deals: Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2025

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There were 212 transactions totaling $324 million recorded in New York City over the prior 24 hours before 4 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2025.

🏆 Residential: The top residential transaction recorded in New York City was for a Carnegie Hill co-op. Real estate executive Richard Hadar and his wife Mica Hadar, an actress and playwright, dropped $13 million on a 4,000-square-foot pad, sold by movie producer Kristin Kehrberg, at 1050 Fifth Avenue. The unit, which had last traded in 2016 for $16.5 million, is currently configured to have three bedrooms and an office/library. Brian Logvinsky and Ryan Siciliano with Douglas Elliman had the listing, which went live in March 2024 for just under $17 million. The transaction pencils out to roughly $3,300 per square foot.

🏆 Commercial: The Bronx saw the priciest commercial deal recorded in the city. New York-based Community Access, a nonprofit that provides affordable and supportive housing, paid $25 million for a development site — currently a 27,000-square-foot parking lot — along River Avenue in Concourse. The organization plans to construct a nearly 300-unit mixed-use project on the site, slated to open in 2029, according to its website. The lot’s seller was an LLC managed by the Irgang Group.

📊 Residential: Fred Gehring, the former CEO of Tommy Hilfiger, offloaded a condo at 41 Bond Street for just under $9 million. The buyer was Seaver 41, LLC, which has the same address as Pleasantville, New York-based A-CAP, a company that provides services to the insurance industry. Gehring had owned the Noho unit since 2011, purchasing it for about $7.1 million. The residence measures about 2,600 square feet and has three bedrooms and three and a half baths. The deal works out to about $2,700 per square foot. Douglas Elliman’s Clif Thorn and James Testa represented Gehring, who put the property on the market in September 2024 for $9.8 million.

📊 Residential: In Tribeca, a condo at Sixty Collister at 157 Hudson Street changed hands for $7.5 million. The seller was 157 Unit 2B LLC, which acquired the unit in 2012 for $3.5 million. The buyer in the latest deal was 60C1C LLC. The four-bedroom pad measures roughly 3,900 square feet. It was listed for sale initially in 2023 with an asking price of $7.8 million. Casa Blanca Real Estate’s Tristen Marin, Nicole Leotta and Hannah Bomze represented the seller.

📊 Residential: A full-floor penthouse at The Metropolitan at 181 East 90th Street in Carnegie Hill traded for $7.4 million. The seller was Palila LLC and the buyer was Gur Dani LLC. The 3,600-square-foot unit has four bedrooms and four and a half baths, along with a terrace measuring just over 1,000 square feet. The condo went on the market in September 2024, with a listing price of $9.3 million. It last sold in 2013 for $8.1 million.

📊 Residential: Kurien Jacob and Sulakshana Jain dropped $6.3 million on a sponsor unit at 430 East 58th Street in Sutton Place. The three-bedroom residence has three bathrooms and spans just over 2,000 square feet. It went on the market in May 2024 for $6.7 million. Corcoran Sunshine Marketing Group is handling sales at the property, which is known as Sutton Tower and was developed by Gamma Real Estate and  JVP Development.

By the Numbers: Which metro has the highest extra homeownership costs?

The country’s top metro coastal areas, some of the most expensive places to buy a home, also have the highest invisible costs of homeownership.

The typical homeowner in the New York metro area spends an average of roughly $24,400 a year on property taxes, home insurance and maintenance — on top of mortgage payments. That’s the highest total additional costs in the country, according to a report from Zillow and Thumbtack, a directory of home maintenance professionals.

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