My Brooklyn Market Perspective: Spring 2026

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My Brooklyn Market Perspective: Spring 2026
Agent Perspective
Brooklyn, NY
Spring 2026

My Brooklyn Market Perspective: Spring 2026

Tami Earnest shares her Brooklyn market perspective for spring 2026 — 14 years of context, what's actually changed, and what matters for buyers and sellers right now.

TE
Tami Earnest — Licensed Real Estate Salesperson, Compass
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What does Brooklyn's spring 2026 market actually look like?

Brooklyn in spring 2026 is the closest thing to a normal functioning market I've seen since 2019. Steady demand, selective pricing, and neighborhood-by-neighborhood divergence. The frenzy is gone. Well-prepared sellers are still moving homes. Buyers who are ready have more time to evaluate than they've had in years — and that's a reasonable environment to act in.

Fourteen years in Brooklyn real estate gives you perspective on what 'normal' looks like. Here's my honest read on where we are in spring 2026 — and what it means for buyers and sellers who are thinking about making a move.

What I'm Actually Seeing This Spring

I've been in Brooklyn real estate for fourteen years. I've watched it shift from a discount alternative to Manhattan, through the peak frenzy years, and into what feels like a more mature, stable market. Spring 2026 is the closest thing to a normal market I've seen since 2019.

That's not a complaint. Normal means buyers can take time to evaluate. Sellers can't rely on demand to paper over pricing mistakes. And both sides need advisors who know the actual market — not the headlines.

For the new development pipeline that's shaping one of the market's key stories this year, see Brooklyn's new development pipeline.

The Neighborhood Divide Is Real

The thing that strikes me most in spring 2026 is how bifurcated the market has become — not just by price point, but by neighborhood. Park Slope and Carroll Gardens behave like one market. Bushwick and East Flatbush behave like another. Prospect Heights sits in the middle, catching buyers priced out of one and not yet comfortable with the other.

This neighborhood-level divergence means that broad market statistics — "Brooklyn is up" or "Brooklyn is down" — are often close to useless for actual decision-making. What matters is what's happening on your specific block, at your specific price point, in the last 90 days.

For a view of where the investment case is strongest across Brooklyn's submarket spectrum, see Brooklyn investment property outlook.

What I Tell Clients Who Ask

When clients ask me if it's a good time to buy or sell in Brooklyn, I give the same answer I've always given: it depends on your situation, not the market's situation. The clients who succeed in any environment are the ones who are financially prepared, priced accurately, and making decisions based on their actual needs rather than trying to time a market that nobody has reliably timed.

What I can tell you about spring 2026 is that the environment is rational. Buyers have more time than they did in 2021. Sellers who price correctly are still moving homes. The frenzy is gone, but the opportunity is real.

For a three-market view of how Brooklyn fits into the broader decision-making picture, see how I help clients compare Brooklyn, Manhattan, and Westchester.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Tami Earnest's view of the Brooklyn market in spring 2026?
Brooklyn is performing steadily but selectively. Well-priced homes in established neighborhoods are moving. Overpriced homes and those in softer submarkets are sitting longer. The market is rewarding preparation and accurate pricing — not speculation or peak-market assumptions.
Is spring 2026 a good time to buy in Brooklyn?
For buyers who are financially ready, spring 2026 offers more inventory and more time to evaluate than the 2021–2022 period allowed. Prices have held in most neighborhoods but without the frenzy. That's a reasonable environment for a considered purchase.
Is spring 2026 a good time to sell in Brooklyn?
For sellers with well-maintained properties in desirable neighborhoods, yes — demand exists and well-priced homes are selling. For sellers who need 2022 prices to make their math work, the current market will be a difficult conversation. Pricing accurately from day one is more important than it's been in years.
How does Brooklyn's 2026 market compare to prior years?
Transaction volume is approaching 2019 levels after the unusual swings of 2020–2022. Price appreciation has moderated after peak-year gains. The market feels closer to a normal functioning real estate environment than it has in several years — which is actually good news for buyers and sellers who are approaching it with realistic expectations.
What makes Brooklyn real estate different from Manhattan in 2026?
Brooklyn offers significantly more square footage per dollar, a stronger neighborhood-community character, and a more owner-occupant buyer pool. Manhattan skews toward investors, pied-à-terre buyers, and high-net-worth primary residents. These different buyer profiles create different market dynamics — and Brooklyn's tend to be more stable over time.
Ready to Talk Brooklyn?
Whether you're buying, selling, or still exploring — I'm happy to walk through what the market actually looks like for your situation.

Get in Touch

Spring 2026 in Brooklyn is a rational market — not a frenzy, not a collapse. Neighborhood-by-neighborhood divergence is the defining feature. Buyers have more time and leverage than the last few years allowed. Sellers who price to current comparables are moving homes; those pricing to 2022 memory are not. For buyers and sellers with realistic expectations, the environment is workable.

If you're trying to figure out what the Brooklyn market means for your specific situation — buying, selling, or somewhere in between — I'm happy to give you a direct, honest answer.

Tami Earnest is a Licensed Real Estate Salesperson with Compass, serving Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Westchester County.
14 years, 1,300+ transactions, $164M+ in volume.
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Tami Earnest, Licensed Real Estate Salesperson, Compass
Tami Earnest
Licensed Real Estate Salesperson
Compass | Manhattan · Brooklyn · Westchester

Contact Tami
202.528.4215



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