The Quarterly / Q4 2025
Q4 2025 Market Report
Office leasing closes 2025 at its highest annual total in six years.
Retail availability hits a record low. A new mayor arrives. The
market chooses momentum.
Published December 2025
New York City’s commercial and residential real estate markets entered 2025 with broader value gains than many expected. The total taxable assessed value across NYC rose 3.9% to $311.2 billion, with property owners now facing higher tax bills heading into FY 26. Single-family (Class 1) assessed value climbed 5.5% to $27.2 billion; multifamily and rental (Class 2) grew 4.8% to $120.7 billion.
Underneath that headline, the asset-class story split sharply: the office sector grew just 2.7% in total market value, while rental apartment market value rose 9.9% — a gap that confirms what every operator we work with has been seeing on the ground. Demand has shifted decisively toward residential. The city’s response: an aggressive Office-to-Rental Conversion (OTRC) program targeting nearly 19,000 new residential units over the next eight years, repurposing underutilized office stock at scale.
For the first time in recent memory, Brooklyn outpaced Manhattan across every Class 2 metric we track. Rental apartment values in Brooklyn rose 15.3% — the highest jump of any borough. Brooklyn’s commercial market followed, posting 6.3% market value growth and a 7.1% jump in assessed values. The trend confirms what tenants, operators, and capital have been telegraphing for two years: Brooklyn is no longer a discount play. It’s the primary growth story.
Blackstone’s recent acquisition of a 50-story Manhattan office building — executed with Eastdil, RBC, Santander, and SMBC — signaled what we’d been hearing in private conversations through Q1: institutional appetite for premium NYC assets is back. The deal demonstrated two things at once: continued appetite for trophy multifamily even in a tough environment, and the kind of multi-bank syndication that only happens when the largest allocators see a floor under pricing.
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Download the PDF version with charts, comp tables, and source data.