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Real Estate

Highlights

    1. Ask Real Estate

      Can Your Co-op Make You Carry an ID Card?

      Co-op boards are responsible for protecting the building and its residents. But is checking IDs going too far?

      By

      CreditNadia Pillon
    2. What You Get

      $2 Million Homes in Vienna

      A modern house set into a hillside, a rooftop apartment with a view of Vienna’s opera house, and a four-bedroom duplex with two terraces.

      By

      CreditViemmo Real Estate
  1. Inside the Storage Units of Six New Yorkers

    In a city of notoriously small apartments, New Yorkers keep their meaningful mementos and quirky collections elsewhere.

    By Anna Kodé and

    CreditVincent Alban/The New York Times
  2. Downtown Tower or Tree-Lined Street? A New Brooklynite Weighed Her Options.

    Looking for prime subway access and proximity to green space, a longtime renter considered newer buildings in various shapes and sizes.

    By

    Robin Clayton with Jackson in Brooklyn, where she recently bought a one-bedroom apartment. Her budget hovered around $1 million.
    CreditKatherine Marks for The New York Times
    The Hunt
  3. We’re Building More Affordable Housing These Days. It’s Still Not Enough.

    The good news is, affordable units are making up a larger share of the new rental supply.

    By

    CreditKarsten Moran for The New York Times
    Calculator
  4. 5 Things to Know About New York’s Proposed Second Home Tax

    Gov. Kathy Hochul wants to tax second homes in New York City that are worth $5 million or more. Here’s how the proposal might work.

    By

    Gov. Kathy Hochul’s proposal on taxing second homes would address the city budget gap by targeting the very wealthy.
    CreditCindy Schultz for The New York Times
  5. Homes for Sale in New York and New Jersey

    This week’s properties are four-bedroom homes in Oyster Bay Cove, N.Y., and Plainsboro, N.J.

    By Claudia Gryvatz Copquin and

    CreditDaniel Gale Sotheby's International Realty
    On the Market
  1. Homes for Sale in Manhattan and Brooklyn

    This week’s properties are in Chelsea, Gramercy Park and Downtown Brooklyn.

    By

    CreditTim Waltman_Evan Joseph Photography
    On the Market
  2. Vacaville, Calif.: It Isn’t Named for Cows

    The city, named for an early settler, is a more affordable option to nearby San Francisco and Sacramento.

    By Alexander Nazaryan and

    Four people and a dog in Lagoon Valley Park.
    Credit
    Living in
  3. Drew Barrymore and Pete Davidson List Homes in Westchester County

    Ms. Barrymore put her house on the market for nearly $5 million; Mr. Davidson wants almost $2.3 million for his. Also, a purchase from Pink.

    By

    CreditGetty Images
    big ticket
  4. A Design Editor Applies Color and Restraint in His Madrid Apartment

    Enric Pastor takes an editor’s eye to his 900-square-foot home.

    By Julie Lasky and

    CreditEmilio Parra Doiztua for The New York Times
    Living Small
  5. $500,000 Homes in Alabama, Maine and Oregon

    A bungalow in Mobile, Ala., a condominium above a storefront in Portland, Maine, and a Craftsman in Astoria, Ore.

    By

    CreditAV Photography
    What You Get

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Ask Real Estate

More in Ask Real Estate ›
  1. Can I Trust a Landlord to Protect My Financial Information?

    Without pay stubs, retirees must share detailed private data with landlords. But will they keep the information safe?

    By

    CreditNadia Pillon
  2. When the Neighbor’s Renovation Gets Too Close for Comfort

    When homes are separated by just a few feet, an extensive or improper renovation project can wreak havoc next door.

    By

    CreditNadia Pillon
  3. What’s the Deal With Rent-to-Buy Home Contracts?

    It may look like an attractive option: renting a home until you have enough money to buy it. But there are traps everywhere.

    By

    CreditNadia Pillon
  4. I’m a Small Landlord. What Can I Do About My Nonpaying Tenants?

    For landlords who rely on rent money to pay the bills, going to housing court can be too costly and time-consuming.

    By

    CreditNadia Pillon
  5. Fees, Fees Fees! Do I Have to Pay All These Extras for Utilities?

    Landlords often use third-party billing services that tack on extra costs. Can you just go around them?

    By

    CreditNadia Pillon

Renters

More in Renters ›
  1. They Moved to Queens, and Then the Apartment Sprang Its First Leak

    Persistent leaks in a family’s Sunnyside apartment have led to pests, water-stained mattresses and years of frustration.

    By D.W. Gibson and

    Sonu Kumari and her family moved into their two-bedroom apartment in Sunnyside, Queens, in the fall of 2019. A month later, part of their ceiling collapsed and began to leak.
    Credit
  2. With a Payout, She Left San Francisco Behind and Moved Back Home

    A woman left the city she loved to return to Chico, Calif., where dozens of cousins and extended family were waiting for her.

    By

    Linda Woods has found new family connections since moving to Chico, near her hometown, Willows.
    CreditAndri Tambunan for The New York Times
  3. A Return to New York Was a Much-Delayed Dream

    Daira Jackson moved away from New York City when she was 8. When she returned nearly 40 years later, it was with her own family and to a new building in Inwood.

    By

    Daira Jackson spent decades trying to get back to New York City. It wasn’t until she and Tarrence Jackson married and grew their family to include their daughter, Victoria, that the timing felt right.
    CreditKatherine Marks for The New York Times
  4. A Leasing Officer Prefers to Rent in New Jersey

    Andrew Forsyth, who works in commercial real estate, is bullish about his industry and just a bit ambivalent about renting, at least for now.

    By

    Andrew Forsyth, who has built a career in commercial real estate, prefers renting over investing in a property of his own. “It’s something I continue to evaluate,” he said.
    CreditYe Fan for The New York Times
  5. A Couple Moves to Queens and Brings Along Their Dining App

    After living in Madrid and growing their restaurant-finding platform, Alexandra Papadopoulos and David Martin Suarez found an apartment in Long Island City.

    By D.W. Gibson and

    Alexandra Papadopoulos and David Martin Suarez moved to New York from Madrid in 2025 and launched a New York-based version of Velada, a dining platform they started in Spain.
    Credit

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Featured Properties

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  1. What You Get

    $3 Million Luxury Homes in Venice

    A four-bedroom duplex near Piazza San Marco, a five-bedroom house on the island of Mazzorbo, and a four-bedroom piano nobile in Cannaregio.

    By Lana Bortolot

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