There were 226 transactions totaling $427 million recorded in New York City over the prior 24 hours before 4 p.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 19, 2025.
🏆 Residential: The Upper West Side had the priciest home sale recorded in the Big Apple. Silvia Aguilar and Luiz Carvalho sold a condo at 219 West 81st Street for $3.5 million. The buyer was a trust. Aguilar and Carvalho had owned the unit since 2017, when they purchased it for $4.1 million. The pad measures just over 2,100 square feet, pricing the deal at roughly $1,700 per square foot. The unit, which first went on the market in April 2023 for $4.3 million, has four bedrooms and three bathrooms. Michael Carroll with Brown Harris Stevens had the listing.
🏆 Commercial: The top commercial deal was near Grand Central Terminal. SL Green Realty scooped up two adjacent properties at 346 Madison Avenue and 11 East 44th Street for $160 million. The seller was Claudio Del Vecchio. JLL’s Drew Isaacson and David Giancola advised on the deal. The properties together have about 800,000 rentable square feet.
📊 Commercial: The Oved Group bought a retail property at 425 Seventh Avenue, between New York Penn Station and Herald Square, from United Pacific Development Corp. for $30 million. The three-story building measures about 4,400 square feet.
📊 Commercial: Norbil Trust Co., a Tokyo-based company, paid $10.4 million for an apartment building at 225 East 25th Street in Kips Bay. The seller was an LLC tied to Parke Leatherman of Lockhill Properties, which had purchased the building in 2023 for just under $6 million. Dating to the 1920s, the property stands five stories tall and has 21 units.
📊 Commercial: In Hell’s Kitchen, a multifamily property at 415 West 47th Street traded for $7.8 million. The sellers were three companies tied to Saveren Fattizzi, Bernard Gleich and Leonard Gleich that had owned the building for decades. The buyers were LLCs managed by John Pantanelli and Jesse Deutch. The five-story-tall building spans about 12,000 square feet and has 24 apartments and ground-floor commercial space. Its last asking price was $8.3 million, according to LoopNet.
By the Numbers: U.S. apartment rents continue to slide in October
The vast majority of the country’s largest markets saw apartment rents edge down in October.
Among the top 30 markets in the U.S., only New Jersey and Detroit experienced month-over-month rent growth, according to a report from commercial real estate data firm Yardi Matrix. The increase in those markets was small, at just 0.1 percent.
Nationwide, rents ticked down 0.2 percent from September, marking the third straight month of declines. Rents grew the most year over year in New York City, surging by 4.7 percent.

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