Buildings with high tenant retention in Manhattan
This page narrows Manhattan buildings that show high tenant retention—3,555+ buildings matching the signal in Openigloo. Use it to focus your search on properties where tenants tend to stay, then verify details that affect your lease and monthly cost. Openigloo helps you evaluate buildings with renter-first reviews, building-level context, and tenant questions you can use to confirm expectations before signing. The high-retention filter is a starting point based on observable tenant-stay patterns, not a guarantee of any specific unit condition or rent outcome.
Buildings with high tenant retention in Manhattan
Showing 163–180 of 3,555 buildings with high tenant retention in Manhattan.
85 4 Avenue
East Village
138 East 38 Street
Murray Hill
320 East 23 Street
Gramercy Park
31 East 31 Street
Midtown East
345 East 12 Street
East Village
300 East 75 Street
Lenox Hill
222 East 3 Street
East Village
200 East 26 Street
Kips Bay
95 Horatio Street
West Village
46 Avenue B
East Village
546 Main St
Roosevelt Island
301 West 45 Street
Hell's Kitchen
635 Riverside Drive
Hamilton Heights
5 Tudor City Place
Murray Hill
20 Avenue A
East Village
600 Columbus Avenue
Upper West Side
212 West 91 Street
Upper West Side
215 West 109 Street
All Upper West Side
What to check before for buildings with high tenant retention in Manhattan
- Start with the retention signal, then check unit-level facts like layout, light, noise, and whether the building meets your move-in timeline.
- Confirm lease terms and renewal process directly with the building or broker, even if the building has strong tenant retention.
- Use tenant Q&A and review notes to identify recurring issues (maintenance turnaround, elevator reliability, building management responsiveness).
- Ask about full monthly costs beyond rent: typical deposits, any move-in fees, parking or laundry charges, and utilities you may be responsible for.
- If you’re touring, review the most recent conditions in-person (water pressure, pests, HVAC performance, cleanliness) since signals reflect patterns over time, not today’s state.