Buildings with heat and hot water included near transit in NYC
This page helps you find NYC buildings with heat and hot water included, plus easy access to transit. Right now, Openigloo shows 1,693+ buildings that match the heat/hot-water included and near-transit filters. Use Openigloo to sanity-check the details before you commit. Each building page pulls together what renters say, open-data signals, and structured tenant Q&A so you can confirm how utilities work in practice and compare nearby options with fewer surprises.
Buildings with heat and hot water included near transit in NYC
Showing 73–90 of 1,693 buildings with heat and hot water included near transit in NYC.

509 Cathedral Parkway
Morningside Heights

888 Main Street
Roosevelt Island

305 West 50 Street
Hell's Kitchen

350 West 37 Street
Hudson Yards

75 West End Avenue
All Upper West Side

1756 Broadway
Midtown

60 West 23 Street
Flatiron

208 West 23 Street
Chelsea

150 West 51 Street
Midtown

325 Kent Avenue
Williamsburg
20 Broad Street
Financial District
230 East 44 Street
Turtle Bay

365 Bond Street
Gowanus
121 Madison Avenue
NoMad

105 Duane Street
Tribeca
77 St Marks Place
East Village
310 3 Avenue
Kips Bay

94 East 4 Street
East Village
What to check before for buildings with heat and hot water included near transit in NYC
- Expect buildings where heat and hot water are included in the rent, but still confirm any limits (seasonal schedules, unit-specific metering, or exceptions) with the leasing office.
- Use the near-transit filter to narrow for commutes, then verify the walk time and line(s) for your exact route during off-peak and late hours.
- Check what is and is not covered: even when heat/hot water are included, you may still pay for electricity, internet, cooking fuel, or other recurring items depending on the building.
- Before signing, ask for the most recent utility policy in writing and confirm how maintenance calls are handled for heating/hot-water problems.
- If you have timing constraints (move-in date, winter heating start), ask whether the building’s included heat/hot-water terms begin on the lease start date.