Bronx County, NY
Property Data

Explore accurate parcel and ownership records,
directly sourced from county assessors.

Total Properties

163,118

Average Home Price

$580,746

Average Square Feet

2,777

Price per Sq Ft

$359

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
1,46818,999

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

163,118

Median Home Price

$406,560

Average Home Price

$580,746

Average Square Feet

2,777

Price per Sq Ft

$359

Recent Sales (12mo)

788

YoY Price Change

4.0%

Sales Velocity

1.8%

The Bronx: America's Most Unequal Affordable Housing Paradox

There is something almost mathematical in its cruelty about the Bronx's housing situation. Home to 1.4 million people — more than the entire population of Maine — this borough carries one of the most recognizable names in American urban culture, yet its residents live in conditions that defy easy categorization. The Bronx is simultaneously a place where homes are "affordable" by New York standards and utterly unaffordable by any rational measure of what its residents actually earn.

The core tension is this: with a median household income of $49,036 — barely 65% of the national median — Bronx residents face a median home price of $406,000. That's a price-to-income ratio of roughly 8.3x, more than double the national benchmark of 4x. The borough isn't cheap. It's just cheaper than Manhattan, which is a very different thing.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Homeownership Rate20.3%Among the lowest of any urban county in the US
Rent Burden Rate56.7%Nearly double the 30% threshold considered sustainable
Severe Rent Burden32.9%One in three renters paying 50%+ of income on rent
Child Poverty Rate34.0%More than one in three children below the poverty line

A Renter's Borough, By Necessity

Nearly 80% of Bronx households rent — a figure that reflects not cultural preference but economic reality. With just 6.5% of housing stock classified as single-family homes, this is a borough defined by apartment towers, pre-war walk-ups, and the vertical density of mid-20th century urban planning. The median year built of 1950 tells a story of Robert Moses-era construction, housing projects, and the slow decay and partial revival that followed the infamous fires of the 1970s, when landlords torched their own buildings for insurance money and the South Bronx became a global symbol of urban collapse.

That history still echoes in the data. Over 36% of households receive SNAP benefits. The poverty rate of 26.9% — and a child poverty rate of 34% — are figures more commonly associated with rural Appalachia than a dense urban county in the nation's wealthiest city.

The Income-Inequality Paradox

The Bronx's Gini index of 0.513 is extraordinarily high. For context, the US as a whole sits around 0.49, itself considered dangerously unequal by international standards. But the Bronx achieves this figure not through the coexistence of tech millionaires and service workers, as in San Francisco, but through profound stratification within a predominantly low-income population. The gap between P10 home prices ($170,000) and P90 ($859,600) spans half a million dollars in a county where nearly a quarter of adults never finished high school.

Labor force participation at 58.3% — well below the national rate — reflects a population that includes many caregivers, people with disabilities (16.5%), and workers locked out of the formal economy. The 11.1% unemployment rate is more than double New York State's average.

Transit-Rich, Asset-Poor

One bright spot the data reveals: the Bronx is genuinely one of the most transit-connected places in America, with 53.7% of residents commuting by public transit and nearly half owning no car at all. The borough sits atop the 2, 4, 5, 6, B, and D subway lines, plus Metro-North rail. This infrastructure is real wealth — it just doesn't show up in property portfolios.

Only 799 homes sold in the past 12 months across a county of 1.4 million people and 553,000 housing units. That near-zero turnover rate (reflecting the tiny 20% ownership share) means the real estate market here is almost academic — something that happens to other people.


FAQs

What makes the Bronx unique in the New York City real estate market? The Bronx is NYC's most affordable borough for buyers on paper, but its homeownership rate of just 20.3% means the vast majority of residents never participate in property ownership at all. The wealth-building engine of American real estate is largely inaccessible here — not because homes don't exist, but because incomes are too low, down payments too distant, and the rental market too dominant to create pathways in.

Why is rent burden so extreme in the Bronx compared to the rest of New York? While Manhattan and Brooklyn get more attention for sky-high rents, the Bronx rent burden crisis is arguably worse in human terms because incomes are so much lower. A $1,436 median rent against a $49,036 median household income means renters here are spending a structurally unsustainable share of every paycheck — and a third are in severe burden territory, paying over half their income to keep a roof over their heads.

Is the Bronx's housing market appreciating? Yes — 3.0% year-over-year price growth shows steady appreciation, but this cuts both ways. Rising values make existing homeowners (the rare 20%) wealthier, while making the already-distant dream of ownership even harder for renters. In a borough where nearly 37% of households receive food assistance, home price appreciation functions less as prosperity and more as pressure.

Market Overview

Bronx County is one of the largest real estate markets with over 163,118 properties in our database.

Properties in Bronx County average $580,746, reflecting a competitive market.

Buyers can expect to pay around $209 per square foot in this market.

Bronx County prices closely align with the New York average.

Bronx County vs New York Average

MetricBronx CountyNew York Avgvs State
Average Price$580,746$601,334-3%
Avg Sq Ft2,7771,633+70%
Price/Sq Ft$209$368-43%
Properties163,1187,351,439-98%

Based on property sales data from the last 18 months

Frequently Asked Questions About Bronx County, NY Real Estate

What is the average home price in Bronx County, NY?

The average home price in Bronx County, NY is $580,746, based on analysis of 163,118 properties in our database.

How many properties are tracked in Bronx County, NY?

Our database includes 163,118 properties in Bronx County, NY, providing comprehensive market coverage.

What is the price per square foot in Bronx County, NY?

The average price per square foot in Bronx County, NY is $209. This is calculated from an average home price of $580,746 and average size of 2,777 square feet.

What is the average home size in Bronx County, NY?

Homes in Bronx County, NY average 2,777 square feet, with an average price of $580,746.

How does Bronx County, NY compare to other New York counties?

Bronx County, NY is one of 62 counties in New York with property data available. Browse other counties to compare market conditions and pricing.

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