Buildings highly rated for heat in NYC
This page highlights buildings highly rated for heat in NYC. Use Openigloo to find buildings where renters consistently flag heating performance, with 3,782+ buildings currently matching this filter. Openigloo brings together tenant feedback plus building-level signals from open data so you can compare options without relying on word-of-mouth. As you narrow down, read the heat-related comments, check any posted building notes, and use tenant Q&A to confirm how heating works in real units—especially in shoulder and winter months.
Buildings highly rated for heat in NYC
Showing 361–378 of 3,782 buildings highly rated for heat in NYC.
888 8 Avenue
Midtown
/-73.98152,40.733954,14/640x640@2x?access_token=pk.eyJ1Ijoib3BlbmlnbG9vIiwiYSI6ImNsYjNmMjVwdzBjeHgzd21wYmJmZDB0eGYifQ.XZvZCOh51yXuDBE-I3Bg0A)
340 East 18 Street
Gramercy Park
/-73.986726,40.698187,14/640x640@2x?access_token=pk.eyJ1Ijoib3BlbmlnbG9vIiwiYSI6ImNsYjNmMjVwdzBjeHgzd21wYmJmZDB0eGYifQ.XZvZCOh51yXuDBE-I3Bg0A)
120 Nassau St
Downtown Brooklyn
633 Marcy Avenue
Bedford-Stuyvesant
217 Thompson Street
Greenwich Village
100 West 26 Street
Chelsea
240 Mercer Street
Greenwich Village
321 Wythe Avenue
Williamsburg
1626 Madison Street
Ridgewood
120 Ridge Street
Lower East Side
425 W 121 St
Morningside Heights
40 Gold Street
Fulton/Seaport
1620 New York Avenue
Flatbush
/-73.969653,40.645013,14/640x640@2x?access_token=pk.eyJ1Ijoib3BlbmlnbG9vIiwiYSI6ImNsYjNmMjVwdzBjeHgzd21wYmJmZDB0eGYifQ.XZvZCOh51yXuDBE-I3Bg0A)
60 Turner Place
Prospect Park South
/-73.949616,40.781552,14/640x640@2x?access_token=pk.eyJ1Ijoib3BlbmlnbG9vIiwiYSI6ImNsYjNmMjVwdzBjeHgzd21wYmJmZDB0eGYifQ.XZvZCOh51yXuDBE-I3Bg0A)
1763 2 Avenue
Yorkville
1024 Gates Avenue
Stuyvesant Heights
808 West End Avenue
Upper West Side
14 Maujer Street
Williamsburg
What to check before for buildings highly rated for heat in NYC
- Expect filter-matched heat performance: review the specific notes on boiler/heat consistency and how fast apartments warm up.
- Before you sign, confirm the apartment’s heating setup (radiators vs. central, thermostat access, and whether heat is included in the rent).
- Ask about seasonal patterns: when heat starts, how it’s regulated, and what happens if the unit runs cold.
- Check what other costs still apply (for example, utilities or metered charges) so your full monthly budget matches what you’re signing up for.
- Use tenant Q&A to verify landlord responsiveness for heat complaints, since building maintenance habits vary even when ratings are similar.