Chinatown, Manhattan, NY Rental Market Trends
Last updated: May 18, 2026 | Source: RentCafe Market Analysis, Yardi Matrix, U.S. Census Bureau
Most affordable neighborhoods in Chinatown?
Harlem $2,473/month
Washington Heights $3,211/month
East Harlem $3,920/month
All of these neighborhoods fall below the city wide average of /month.Most expensive neighborhoods in Chinatown?
Sutton Place $6,620/month
NoLIta $6,954/month
Flatiron District $7,093/month
These neighborhoods typically command higher rents due to location, amenities, and demand.Average Rent in Manhattan, NY By Neighborhood
| Neighborhood | Average Rent |
|---|---|
| Flatiron District | $7,093 |
| NoLIta | $6,954 |
| Sutton Place | $6,620 |
| TriBeCa | $6,506 |
| NoMad | $6,452 |
| NoHo | $6,410 |
| Central Midtown | $6,191 |
| Lincoln Square | $5,996 |
| Lower East Side | $5,970 |
| Financial District | $5,957 |
| Chelsea | $5,938 |
| East Village | $5,779 |
| Kips Bay | $5,755 |
| Turtle Bay | $5,596 |
| Murray Hill | $5,575 |
| Manhattan Valley | $5,546 |
| Theatre District - Times Square | $5,417 |
| West Village | $5,381 |
| Carnegie Hill | $5,256 |
| Clinton - Hell's Kitchen | $5,221 |
| Greenwich Village | $5,167 |
| Lenox Hill | $5,114 |
| Yorkville | $5,088 |
| Upper West Side | $4,933 |
| Garment District | $4,745 |
| Civic Center | $4,639 |
| Morningside Heights | $4,377 |
| Gramercy Park | $4,158 |
| East Harlem | $3,920 |
| Washington Heights | $3,211 |
| Harlem | $2,473 |
Manhattan | Rent Comparison by Neighborhood
Rent in Carnegie Hill is 15% lower than in Central Midtown
Where this data comes from
The rental statistics on this page were compiled by RentCafe.com, a nationwide apartment search website trusted by millions of renters to find apartments and houses for rent throughout the U.S.
Rent prices, trends, and apartment sizes were calculated based on data from our sister company, Yardi Matrix, an apartment market intelligence solution that covers approximately 90% of the U.S. metro area population. The data includes comprehensive information on all Chinatown apartment buildings with 50 or more units, totaling 23.5 million apartments across 181 U.S. markets.
Housing composition data was sourced from the U.S. Census Bureau, using the most recently available information by tenure.