Strictly Enforcing Flex Bedroom Advertising

The Flex bedroom concept has been around forever: converting an extra alcove or living room into an extra bedroom using temporary walls or dividers. Maybe thousands of years ago, cavemen would roll large home large boulders, turning the studio cavern into a junior one.

Unfortunately, the Manhattan real estate jargon makes life more complicated for the typical renter only moving once every 2-4 years. The NY Times wrote a 1999 piece breaking down the Junior One vs Junior Four (hint, the Junior Four does not house 4 times as many people as a Junior One). In the very first season of Sex and the City, Charlotte infamously exclaims: “No guy buys a classic-six on the Upper West Side unless they’re seriously thinking about marriage!”


 

As it turns out, a classic six does NOT include any conversions or walls, but the few that aren’t part of fancy co-ops may have long been advertised as Flex 4 Bedrooms (no need for a maid’s room or dining room when you can have more roommates!)

At RentHop, we encourage landlords and agents to post their open and exclusive listings, while listing all desirable amenities. If an alcove or living room lends itself to conversion, by all means denote it. We even recently changed our search and filtering algorithms to better accommodate flex listings. However, we are committed to transparency and listing accuracy.

We require managers input the ORIGINAL, true bedroom count when entering listings. Whether or not the wall already exists, renters should know what they agreeing to see, and the most reasonable way to compare apartments is using the pre-conversion sizes.


 

Accounts in violation of our policy receive strict penalties, per our terms of service, and may include a permanent ban from our platform with no refund. RentHop works because the majority of agents and landlords believe in honest and truthful advertising.

Lee Lin
Lee Lin
Lee is a data geek from MIT who spent years at quantitative hedge funds cranking out models to explain and predict financial markets. Real estate has always been a big part of Lee's life. He grew up helping out at his parents' Jersey Shore motels, became a landlord his first year out of college, analyzed mortgages on a fixed-income trading desk, and acquired a New York real estate license. At RentHop, he combines his nerd talents and real estate knowledge to constantly tweak the secret HopScore. He currently lives near Bryant Park and his favorite restaurant was Cafe Zaiya (now known as Tomiz).

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