Buildings with low rent increases in Manhattan
This page covers Manhattan buildings with low rent increases, with 3,853+ buildings in scope. Use it to compare buildings where tenant-friendly renewal and rent-increase patterns may matter more to your budget. Openigloo organizes the decision around what you can verify: building records surfaced as open-data signals, tenant Q&A from residents, and review context that can help you ask better questions before you sign. You can also filter by what’s available right now, then cross-check details directly with the building or management.
Buildings with low rent increases in Manhattan
Showing 199–216 of 3,853 buildings with low rent increases in Manhattan.
245 West 51 Street
Midtown
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500 East 77 Street
Lenox Hill
235 East 13 Street
East Village
24 5 Avenue
Greenwich Village
222 E 39 St
Murray Hill
230 East 7 Street
East Village
517 West 113 Street
Morningside Heights
114 Ridge Street
Lower East Side
189 Claremont Avenue
Morningside Heights
243 East 81 Street
Yorkville
143 Ludlow Street
Lower East Side
1373 Avenue Of The Americas
Midtown
414 West 44 Street
Hell's Kitchen
309 West 57 Street
Hell's Kitchen
206 East 26 Street
Kips Bay
50 West 72 Street
All Upper West Side
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520 East 11 Street
East Village
888 8 Avenue
Midtown
What to check before for buildings with low rent increases in Manhattan
- Start with the 3,853+ buildings list, then narrow by what you need (availability, building basics, and any restrictions you care about).
- Before touring, confirm the lease terms in writing: renewal terms, rent-change history where available, and whether any benefits or protections apply to your specific unit.
- Ask how rent increases are calculated in practice (timing, notices, and what triggers an increase) and whether staff can provide a unit-specific expectation.
- Check practical costs beyond rent: broker fee rules, security deposit, and any typical move-in or recurring charges tied to the lease.
- Use tenant Q&A and reviews to identify process issues (response times, maintenance follow-through, and how the building communicates notices).
- Treat any “low increase” signal as a starting point and verify directly with management for the unit you’re considering. Policies and unit circumstances can differ.