Short-Term or Long-Term Rental in Brooklyn: What the Numbers Show
Verdict: Long-term rental wins by default. NYC Local Law 18 effectively bans investor-owned short-term rentals under 30 days, leaving long-term tenancies as the only legal play, with gross yields of 3.5% on a typical 3-bedroom house.
Best For: Long-horizon appreciation investors and high-net-worth buyers willing to accept thin cash flow in exchange for Brooklyn's price growth and tenant demand.
Scores out of 10 across yield, regulations, tax, risk, and market fundamentals. How we score
Underlying Assumptions (data as of May 2026):
- Property Price: 3-bedroom houses estimated at around $1,065,940
- Monthly Long-Term Rent: Approximately $3,183
- Regulations: Short-term rental banned for investor-owned properties under NYC Local Law 18 (2023). Hosts must register, occupy the property during stays, and limit guests to two; entire-home rentals under 30 days are prohibited.
See your suburb's full long-term rental breakdown in the dashboard
Long-Term Rental Is the Only Legal Play in Brooklyn
Investors arriving in Brooklyn looking for short-term rental income should reset expectations before signing anything. NYC Local Law 18, in force since 2023, requires every host to register with the Mayor's Office of Special Enforcement, be physically present for any stay under 30 days, and host no more than two guests at a time. Whole-home rentals under 30 days are prohibited. In practice, that closes the entire investor short-term rental model: if you do not live in the property, you cannot legally rent it on Airbnb for a weekend.
That regulatory reality reshapes the question. The choice is not "short-term rental versus long-term rental," it is "long-term rental versus not buying in Brooklyn at all." The market data below assumes a long-term tenancy on a 3-bedroom house at roughly $1,065,940, the median across Kings County's 38 ZIP codes.
Estimates for a typical 3-bedroom house. Short-term rental is not available to investors in this market.
Annual gross rent is monthly rent × 12 × tenanted occupancy (97%), not the headline monthly figure × 12. The vacancy haircut reflects ACS county-level vacancy data and is what the Dashboard uses.
A 3.5% gross yield is well below the national median of 5.3%; Brooklyn investors are paying for capital growth and tenant depth, not headline cash flow.
Brooklyn Yields Vary Widely by neighborhood
Brooklyn's borough-level median masks a wide spread between brownstone neighborhoods and the deeper-Brooklyn ZIPs where prices have not run as hard. The highest gross yield in the dataset, Stuyvesant Heights/Bed-Stuy (11233) at 5.8%, comes from a sale price of $762,250 against $3,658 a month. Compare that with the prime DUMBO and Brooklyn Heights ZIPs, where 3-bedroom houses clear over $3M and gross yields fall below 2.5%.
These are averages per ZIP. The dashboard breaks it down further, by bedroom count and property type, so you can model your specific property. Out of 38 ZIPs in the dataset, the top long-term rental yielders are concentrated in central and southern Brooklyn, while the cash-flow-poor end is dominated by Brooklyn Heights, DUMBO, Park Slope, and Williamsburg.
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NYC Local Law 18 Closes the Door on Investor Short-Term Rentals
Short-term rentals heavily restricted in New York. Investment properties generally not permitted; may require owner occupancy, specific zoning, or other conditions (permit required, $145). NYC Local Law 18 (2023) effectively bans most short-term rentals under 30 days. Hosts must register, be present during stays, and may host no more than 2 guests. Entire-home rentals under 30 days are prohibited. The practical effect is binary: an investor who does not live in the unit cannot rent it for under 30 days, full stop. Listings on Airbnb without a valid registration number are blocked from accepting bookings under 30 nights, and platforms are required to verify registration before processing payment.
Investors who still want a short-stay product in New York have two narrow options. First, 30-day-plus corporate or relocation lets remain legal and sit outside Local Law 18, but yields are closer to long-term rental than to nightly Airbnb. Second, a handful of upstate New York markets remain permissive: Niagara Falls, the Adirondacks, and Lake Placid catchment ZIPs operate under the state's 4% lodging tax with looser local rules. None of them deliver Brooklyn's tenant depth or appreciation profile, so they are a different investment thesis rather than a substitute.
Operating Costs Take Roughly $21,373 Off Brooklyn Long-Term Rentals
On a $1,065,940 3-bedroom house generating $37,082 of vacancy-adjusted gross rent, total long-term rental operating costs run to about $21,373 per year. That includes property tax of $6,716 at the borough's effective rate of 0.6%, landlord insurance of $4,264, maintenance of $10,393, and a property management fee of around 8% of rent if you choose to use one. The dashboard defaults to self-managed long-term rental, which is why management fees sit outside the headline net income figure.
After costs, net operating income lands at roughly $15,709, or a net yield of 1.5% against the purchase price. That is not enough to cover an 80% loan-to-value mortgage at current rates, so most Brooklyn long-term rental deals require either a substantial deposit, additional cash injection during the hold, or an explicit appreciation thesis. Closing costs and transfer taxes apply on purchase; speak with your attorney for current New York City and State rates.
Tax Implications for Brooklyn Investors
Federal depreciation is the single biggest tax shield on a Brooklyn rental. The IRS lets you depreciate the building component of the property over 27.5 years; on a $1,065,940 purchase with a 65% building allocation, that produces a depreciable base of $692,861 and an annual non-cash deduction of $25,195. Combined with mortgage interest (fully deductible on Schedule E with no SALT cap for rental properties), most Brooklyn long-term rental investors will report a tax loss in the early years even when the property is cash-flow positive.
Where Brooklyn hurts you is state and city income tax. New York is not a no-income-tax state; rental net income is taxed at the standard New York State and New York City rates, which sit among the highest in the country. The flip side: when you eventually sell, a Section 1031 exchange can roll the gain into another investment property and defer the federal capital gains tax indefinitely. For investors who plan to hold and 1031, the headline net yield understates the after-tax return.
Brooklyn Yields Below the New York and US Averages
Comparison of key investment metrics.
| Metric | Brooklyn | New York Avg | US Average |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3-Bed Sale Price | $1,065,940 | $294,094 | $242,500 |
| Monthly Rent | $3,183/mo | $1,304/mo | $1,070/mo |
| Gross Yield (Long-Term Rental) | 3.5% | 5.3% | 5.3% |
Brooklyn's median 3-bedroom house at $1,065,940 is roughly 3.6 times the New York State median and over 4 times the national figure, while monthly rent is only about 2.4 times the state median. That gap is the appreciation premium: Brooklyn investors are paying for population density, transit access, and a borough that has compounded property values faster than upstate New York or most US metros over the past two decades.
Why Investors Accept Lower Yields in Brooklyn
The case for buying at a 3.5% gross yield rests on three things Brooklyn delivers and most cash-flow markets do not. First, price growth: Kings County 3-bed prices range from $503,543 in the deepest-Brooklyn ZIPs to $3,477,780 in Brooklyn Heights, and the long-run trend has been upward across all bands. Second, tenant depth: Brooklyn vacancy at 97% tenanted occupancy is among the tightest in the United States, and turnover risk is low. Third, exit liquidity: when you sell, you sell into a market with the largest pool of qualified buyers in the country.
Cash-flow investors should look elsewhere. A buyer chasing Brooklyn for nightly rates on Airbnb is fighting the regulator; a buyer chasing Brooklyn for a 3.5% long-term rental is overpaying for cash flow. The investors who win in Kings County are those holding 10+ years, with enough deposit to absorb early-year negative cash flow, and a clear appreciation thesis they are willing to defend.
Investment Bottom Line
Brooklyn is an appreciation play wrapped in long-term rental income. Short-term rental is off the table for investors, long-term rental yields are well below average, and the only investors who should be writing offers here are those who have explicitly chosen Brooklyn for capital growth and tenant security rather than cash flow.
| Investor Type | Fit |
|---|---|
| Cash Flow Focused | Poor |
| Appreciation Focused | Excellent |
| Short-Term Rental Operator | Not Viable |
| High Leverage (80%+ LTV) | Poor |
Within Brooklyn, the highest-yielding ZIPs (Stuyvesant Heights/Bed-Stuy (11233), Sunset Park (11220), Crown Heights (11213)) offer the best cash-flow-to-appreciation balance, while the prime brownstone neighborhoods sit at the appreciation-pure end of the spectrum. Brooklyn House vs Apartment: Apartments Lead Before HOA Costs covers the house-versus-apartment question within Brooklyn, and Rego Park (11374) Leads Queens Rental Yields at 6.8% covers the equivalent in adjacent Queens, where the regulatory picture and yield profile differ. For state-wide context, New York rental market insights compares Brooklyn against upstate alternatives like Niagara Falls and Syracuse, where short-term rental remains legal and gross yields exceed 14%.
Methodology and data lineage are documented in our market score methodology and data sources pages. Data reflects market conditions as of May 2026.
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This information is for educational purposes only and should not be considered financial or legal advice. Regulations and market conditions change frequently. Verify current rules with local authorities before making investment decisions.
Methodology and Assumptions
Defaults used in the figures above. All inputs are adjustable in the dashboard.
How available nights are determined
Available nights default to 330 per year, reflecting an active operator with minimal blocked time. Where local regulations cap whole-home short-term lets (for example London at 90 nights, New South Wales at 180), the cap is applied. In markets where short-term rental requires owner-occupancy or is otherwise prohibited for investment properties, available nights drop to zero.
How occupancy is measured
The percentage of available nights that get booked, drawn from market data. A property listed for 200 nights with 100 bookings shows 50% occupancy. Adjustable in the dashboard.
Long-term rental management default
Defaults to self-managed (zero management fee), reflecting the most common arrangement for US individual investors. The dashboard slider lets you add a property manager fee if you plan to outsource.
Short-term rental management default
Set to self-managed (zero management fee) by default, the most common arrangement for individual investors. Hiring a professional manager typically costs 20-25% of gross revenue and reduces net yield proportionally. Toggle in the dashboard.
How property tax is calculated
Calculated as a percentage of property value, varying by state and county. California properties show lower effective rates due to Proposition 13's 1% cap on assessed value. Property tax sits with the owner; long-term tenants do not pay it.
Local regulations
Short-term rentals heavily restricted in New York. Investment properties generally not permitted; may require owner occupancy, specific zoning, or other conditions (permit required, $145). NYC Local Law 18 (2023) effectively bans most short-term rentals under 30 days. Hosts must register, be present during stays, and may host no more than 2 guests. Entire-home rentals under 30 days are prohibited.
Sampling and data sources
Short-term rental yield figures reflect properties currently listed on short-term rental platforms. In high-tourism markets, listings tend to concentrate in central postcodes, which can pull city-median yields above what residential areas of the same city would achieve. Yields for any specific suburb may differ significantly from the city-wide median.
For metric definitions and broader methodology, see the About page.