Ryan Roberts Real Estate

How New Development and Rezoning Are Really Affecting Resale Values in Brooklyn, Manhattan, and Queens

New development doesn’t automatically hurt resale value but it changes how, when, and at what price your home sells, especially near transit hubs and rezoned corridors across Brooklyn, Manhattan, and Queens.

The big picture: NYC is adding supply but not evenly

Across NYC, tens of thousands of new residential units are approved or underway, but they’re highly concentrated:

For sellers, this means your competition isn’t “the market”, it’s the specific new product buyers can choose instead of your home.

Brooklyn: Where new development helps and hurts resales

Brooklyn sellers are most affected by rezoning and mixed use growth.

What’s happening

How this affects resale value

Seller takeaway:

If your Brooklyn home is older or lacks updates, pricing to “test the market” is riskier than it was two years ago.  Buyers now have a visible alternative.

Manhattan: Conversions change buyer expectations

In Manhattan, the story isn’t ground up towers, it’s conversion supply.

What’s happening

How this affects resale value

Seller takeaway:

You don’t lose value just because conversions exist but you lose leverage if your pricing ignores them.

Queens: New development reshapes local price ceilings

Queens sellers see the clearest before and after impact from new development.

What’s happening

How this affects resale value

Seller takeaway:
In Queens, buyers compare very literally.  If your resale doesn’t justify its price relative to new construction, time on market increases.

How smart sellers win despite new inventory

Successful sellers in 2026 are doing three things consistently:

1. Pricing against real competition

Not just past resales but:

2. Positioning clearly

Answering the buyer’s silent question: Why should I buy this instead of that new building?”

That might be:

3. Timing matters more than ever

Launching before major new deliveries hit or pricing aggressively when they do can be the difference between selling quickly and chasing the market.

The bottom line for NYC sellers

New development and rezoning are not reasons to panic but they are reasons to be precise.  If you’re selling in Brooklyn, Manhattan, or Queens, the question isn’t Is new development coming?”  It’s “How does it change what buyers will pay for my home?”  That’s where strategy, not headlines, determines your result.

Thinking about selling?

If you would like an honest assessment of how new development in your neighborhood affects your pricing, timing, and strategy, I’m happy to walk you through it.  The right plan makes all the difference in a market that’s changing block by block.

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