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Buildings with low rent increases in East Village

East Village buildings are a common target for renters who want to compare how rent changes across the neighborhood using building-level signals on Openigloo. On this page, you’re looking specifically at East Village in Manhattan with 420+ eligible buildings. East Village rated buildings average 3.4/5 across 466 rated buildings (building-level trends; individual units can differ)

Openigloo filters East Village buildings with low-rent-increase patterns, showing 420+ buildings in Manhattan’s East Village neighborhood. Use this page to narrow by regulatory/tenant-protection signals linked to how rents may change over time. Then verify the details that matter for your lease: building records, recent notes from other renters, and tenant-focused Q&A. Openigloo brings together rated-building history and open-data indicators so you can compare buildings faster and ask sharper questions before you sign.

Buildings with low rent increases in East Village

Showing 253–270 of 420 buildings with low rent increases in East Village.

188 Avenue B
Good cause

188 Avenue B

3.4(2)

East Village

No evictions
No open violations
No litigation history
No bedbug history
199 2 Avenue
Rent-stabilized

199 2 Avenue

3.5(2)

East Village

No evictions
8 open violations
No litigation history
No bedbug history
228 Avenue B
Rent-stabilized
Good cause

228 Avenue B

4.4(2)

East Village

1 eviction
2 open violations
No litigation history
No bedbug history
50 East 3 Street
Rent-stabilized
Good cause

50 East 3 Street

4.0(2)

East Village

1 eviction
8 open violations
No litigation history
No bedbug history
333 East 13 Street
Rent-stabilized
Good cause

333 East 13 Street

3.5(2)

East Village

No evictions
3 open violations
No litigation history
No bedbug history
229 East 5 Street
Rent-stabilized
Good cause

229 East 5 Street

4.6(2)

East Village

No evictions
21 open violations
1 litigation case
No bedbug history
139 East 12 Street
Rent-stabilized
Good cause

139 East 12 Street

2.5(2)

East Village

1 eviction
1 open violation
No litigation history
No bedbug history
435 East 12 Street
Rent-stabilized
Good cause

435 East 12 Street

3.9(2)

East Village

1 eviction
7 open violations
No litigation history
No bedbug history
315 East 9 Street
Rent-stabilized
Good cause

315 East 9 Street

4.1(2)

East Village

No evictions
10 open violations
1 litigation case
No bedbug history
409 East 6 Street
Rent-stabilized
Good cause

409 East 6 Street

3.4(2)

East Village

No evictions
1 open violation
No litigation history
No bedbug history
347 East 5 Street
Rent-stabilized

347 East 5 Street

3.4(2)

East Village

2 evictions
104 open violations
No litigation history
No bedbug history
206 Avenue A
Rent-stabilized
Good cause

206 Avenue A

4.2(2)

East Village

No evictions
No open violations
1 litigation case
No bedbug history
745 East    6 Street
Good cause

745 East 6 Street

4.8(2)

East Village

1 eviction
1 open violation
No litigation history
No bedbug history
19 East 7 Street
Rent-stabilized
Good cause

19 East 7 Street

2.9(2)

East Village

No evictions
4 open violations
No litigation history
No bedbug history
112 East 7 Street
Rent-stabilized
Good cause

112 East 7 Street

2.9(2)

East Village

No evictions
4 open violations
1 litigation case
No bedbug history
317 East 9 Street
Rent-stabilized
Good cause

317 East 9 Street

4.1(2)

East Village

No evictions
No open violations
1 litigation case
No bedbug history
79 Avenue A
Rent-stabilized

79 Avenue A

4.1(2)

East Village

No evictions
9 open violations
3 litigation cases
No bedbug history
89 E 2 St
Good cause

89 E 2 St

2.6(2)

East Village

No evictions
105 open violations
15 litigation cases
No bedbug history

What to check before for buildings with low rent increases in East Village

  • Treat “low rent increases” as a screening signal, not a promise. Confirm the exact rent-regulation status and what renewal or increase language applies to your unit.
  • Check unit-specific terms (renewal, preferencing, vacancy rules if relevant) and ask for the latest lease rider or renewal paperwork the landlord can provide.
  • Use the building page to review what other renters reported about management responsiveness, maintenance timing, and how policies play out in practice.
  • Watch for full upfront and ongoing costs beyond rent (application or admin fees, deposits, utilities), since monthly totals affect affordability even when rent growth is slower.
  • If a building has low-increase eligibility but you see inconsistencies in documents, ask for clarification in writing before moving forward.

Nearby neighborhoods in Manhattan

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