Brooklyn's $1,074 Price Per Square Foot: What the Spring 2026 Numbers Are Telling Us

Custom Image
 
Home Blog Brooklyn Market Spring 2026
Market Intelligence Brooklyn — Spring 2026

Brooklyn’s $1,074 Price Per Square Foot: What the Spring 2026 Numbers Are Telling Us

Brooklyn’s median price per square foot reached $1,074 in March 2026 — a 13.4% year-over-year gain. Signed contracts are down 8.4% from the same period last year. Both numbers are true, and understanding what is driving each changes how buyers and sellers should read the market.

Tami Earnest
Tami Earnest
Licensed Real Estate Salesperson  ·  Compass
Published • Updated
Direct Answer

What is Brooklyn's price per square foot in spring 2026 and what does it mean?

Brooklyn's median PPSF reached $1,074 in March 2026, up 13.4% year-over-year. The gain reflects a composition shift — more premium, larger, better-located transactions — rather than uniform appreciation across the borough. Signed contracts are down 8.4% from March 2025, meaning fewer homes are selling overall even as what sells trades at higher prices.

Talk Through Your Brooklyn Search With Tami →
Brooklyn’s spring 2026 market data contains a pair of numbers that seem contradictory until you understand what is driving each one. Price per square foot is up 13.4% year-over-year. Signed contracts are down 8.4%. Both are accurate. Here’s how to read them together.
The $1,074 Number What Brooklyn's PPSF gain actually reflects

Brooklyn’s median price per square foot hit $1,074 in March 2026 — up 13.4% from March 2025. That headline number is real and significant. But it does not mean every Brooklyn home appreciated 13.4% over the past year. Understanding what is actually driving it changes how buyers and sellers interpret the market.

The gain reflects a composition shift: March 2026 saw a higher concentration of premium transactions — larger units, better-located buildings, higher-finish properties — than March 2025. When the mix of what sells skews premium, the median PPSF rises even if no individual property gained 13.4%.

Metric March 2026 Change YoY
Median PPSF $1,074 ↑ 13.4%
Signed contracts 542 ↓ 8.4% vs. March 2025
Active listings 3,244 ↑ 9.9% vs. March 2025
Median condo price ~$1.1M ↑ 13.5%
Median co-op price ~$430K Flat (+0.2%)
Median rent (2BR) $3,750 ↑ 7.2%

The divergence between condos and co-ops mirrors what’s happening in Manhattan — buyers are paying a premium for ownership flexibility. For the neighborhood-by-neighborhood buyer leverage breakdown, the Brooklyn buyer leverage guide covers where buyers have room to negotiate and where they don’t.

Supply & Demand Inventory is rising but not in the neighborhoods buyers want most

Brooklyn’s active listing count reached 3,244 in March — up 9.9% year-over-year. On the surface that sounds like meaningful inventory relief. In practice, the supply is not evenly distributed, and that matters enormously for buyers.

Neighborhood Inventory Trend Buyer-Seller Leverage
Bushwick Inventory up; price reductions rising Buyer advantage
East New York More supply; entry-level pricing Buyer advantage
Crown Heights Softening prices; building inventory Balanced / buyer-leaning
Fort Greene / Downtown BK New development momentum; IBX rail planned Seller-leaning
Park Slope / Bay Ridge Tight; family demand steady Seller-leaning
Carroll Gardens Premium pricing; near-Manhattan demand Seller-leaning

The IBX light rail planned for Fort Greene and Downtown Brooklyn is a structural demand driver — buyers are anticipating the infrastructure improvement. Park Slope and Bay Ridge remain family favorites with very low turnover. Bushwick is the clearest buyer-opportunity neighborhood in the borough right now. For more on how the Brooklyn market compares to Westchester as an alternative, the NYC-to-Westchester migration signal covers what is driving buyers out of the boroughs entirely.

Rental vs. Buy What Brooklyn's rent surge means for buyers in 2026

Brooklyn’s rental market tightened significantly in early 2026. The median asking rent reached $3,750 in February — up 7.2% year-over-year. Rental inventory fell 5.9%. Competition on two-bedroom units is 171% above pre-pandemic levels.

This tightening is meaningful context for buyers. When rent is rising faster than incomes and competition for apartments is extreme, the buy-vs-rent calculation shifts. But the buy side has its own pressure: at a $1.1 million median condo price, buyers need 10-20% down plus closing costs, and monthly carrying costs at 6.5% mortgage rates are substantial.

The calculus is specific to each buyer’s situation. What is consistent is that the Brooklyn market — both rentals and sales — is not getting cheaper in aggregate. Buyers who are sitting on the sideline waiting for a significant price correction are competing against renters who are facing the same affordability squeeze. The observations on what Brooklyn buyers are asking about right now captures how this is shifting buyer conversations in real time.

FAQ Common questions answered
What is the Brooklyn price per square foot in spring 2026?
Brooklyn's median price per square foot reached $1,074 in March 2026, up 0.5% from February and 13.4% above March 2025. This is one of the sharpest year-over-year PPSF gains the borough has seen, and it reflects a shift in the composition of what is selling — more premium transactions in better-located, larger units.
Are Brooklyn home prices rising or falling in 2026?
Brooklyn prices per square foot are rising sharply — up 13.4% year-over-year as of March 2026. The borough-wide median sale price is approximately $997,000-$1.1 million depending on the source. However, signed contracts are 8.4% below March 2025 levels, meaning fewer homes are selling even as what sells trades at higher prices.
Which Brooklyn neighborhoods favor buyers in spring 2026?
Bushwick is seeing the largest increase in inventory and price reductions, giving buyers meaningful leverage. East New York continues to offer the most affordable entry points in Brooklyn. Crown Heights has softening prices despite strong long-term fundamentals. These areas contrast with Park Slope, Bay Ridge, and Carroll Gardens, where demand remains strong and supply stays tight.
Why is Brooklyn's price per square foot up 13.4% if fewer homes are selling?
The 13.4% PPSF gain reflects a composition shift, not uniform appreciation. March 2026 saw a higher concentration of larger, better-located, premium transactions than March 2025. When more premium properties sell relative to lower-priced ones, the median PPSF rises even if individual homes haven't appreciated 13.4%.
How does the Brooklyn rental market compare to buying in 2026?
Brooklyn's median asking rent reached $3,750 in February 2026, up 7.2% year-over-year, while rental inventory fell 5.9%. Competition on two-bedroom units is 171% above pre-pandemic levels. This rental tightening is pushing some renters to evaluate buying — though at a median condo price of $1.1 million, the buy vs. rent math requires careful analysis.

Brooklyn's median PPSF hit $1,074 in March 2026 — up 13.4% year-over-year — reflecting a premium shift in what is selling, not uniform borough-wide appreciation. Signed contracts remain 8.4% below March 2025, and inventory is rising in some neighborhoods while staying tight in others. Buyers have real leverage in Bushwick and East New York. Park Slope, Bay Ridge, and Carroll Gardens remain seller-leaning. The rental market is tightening simultaneously, changing the buy vs. rent calculation for a meaningful segment of Brooklyn renters.

The Brooklyn market in spring 2026 is a neighborhood-by-neighborhood story. The borough-wide PPSF headline tells you where the premium is. The neighborhood-level supply data tells you where to negotiate.

Tami Earnest — Licensed Real Estate Salesperson | Compass Serving Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Westchester County, NY. About Tami  · Buy With Me  · Get in Touch
Tami Earnest Tami EarnestLicensed Real Estate Salesperson  ·  Compass

Active in Brooklyn sales and advising buyers evaluating the borough against Manhattan and Westchester alternatives.

Schedule a Consultation →
Areas Covered
Manhattan · Brooklyn · Scarsdale · New Rochelle · Larchmont · Bronxville · Rye · Harrison · Mamaroneck

Check out this article next

Why Westchester Home Prices Hit $1.3M While Sales Dropped 16%: Reading the Q1 Numbers

Why Westchester Home Prices Hit $1.3M While Sales Dropped 16%: Reading the Q1 Numbers

Most agents work one market. Tami Earnest works both — active in Manhattan and Brooklyn as a buyer's agent and across Westchester as a listing…

Read Article