We’ve provided an extensive list of unique tips that can help you find a New York City apartment by working with a real estate broker. The best thing you can do to find your new apartment is keep the faith and remember that your next unit is out there.
Tips to Know Before Meeting Your Broker
This post is the final entry in our series on Tips to Know Before Meeting Your Broker in 2014.ย The series is based on our experiences shadowing several rental brokers in New York in late 2013.ย We learned a lot about the best – and worst – ways to work with brokers.
Bonus Tip: Keep the Faith!
True, many of the broker/client meetings we observed ended in frustration, usually because clients failed to follow one or more of the other five tips. But when the right expert meets an informed and savvy client, success happensโฆsometimes in as little as three hours.
โI used to sell concepts. Now I sell apartments.โ This is how David Webb, a former high school English teacher who now works as an agent for Sommerlyn Associates, described his job to me. When I met Webb at R&R Coffee in the Financial District, he was sporting a beardโa necessity for a part heโs currently playing in an off- off- Broadway production of Fiddler on the Roof. He spoke with a gentle Southern accent; indeed, โgentleโ would be a good descriptor of Webbโs entire approach. In the hours we spent shadowing him, what struck us most was that he did not seem to be actively โsellingโ apartments at all. And yet his clients, Elliott and Korinne, a couple looking to rent their first apartment together, were brimming with praise at the end of the appointment: โWeโre very satisfied with what weโve seen so far,โ said Elliott. Korinne agreed: โThis was very productive. It was just what we wanted.โ
Korinne and Elliott’s Apartment Search
Korinne and Elliott are recent college graduates, both working in SoHo. He was living in East Harlem and hoping to trim down on his commute time. She was living with roommates in Midtown East. She told me that during the search for that apartment, two years ago, she and her roommates didnโt want to use a broker. But the apartment they found through Craigslist was attached to one, so in the end they paid a fee anyway, they just didnโt get any service for it. This time, with both she and Elliott busy with work, she decided to do things differently. A friend referred them to Webb.
Initial Broker Meeting
Before we all met, Webb spoke with Elliott on the phone. He learned that the couple was searching for either a one-bedroom or a studio, with a budget of $2,500. Their preference was for Murray Hill or Kips Bay, but, as Elliott put it, โWeโd live anywhere if the apartmentโs right.โ He also told Webb that they strongly preferred looking at Owner Pays (OP) apartments (apartments where the landlord or management company, not the tenant, pays the brokerโs fee).
After hearing their preferences, Webb asked if theyโd consider the Financial District. Why? OP apartments in Murray Hill and Kips Bay are a rarity. FiDi, with its amenity-rich high rises, is packed with them. Though they hadnโt considered FiDi, they were open to it. Webb arranged for us all to meet there on a brisk Saturday morning in late November.
The Apartment Tour
Over the course of three hours, Webb showed Korinne and Elliott nine apartments. Heโd planned a tour that would expose them to the range of options available in FiDi, a strategy that would also help him gauge their tastes quickly. Our first stop was an older building, a bit tired looking, its hallways wallpapered with a faded floral pattern. Inside the apartments, the kitchens and bathrooms lacked the โwowโ factorโthink granite countertops and marble floorsโfor which FiDiโs high rises are known. The perk? Tons of square footage. For $2500, they could live in a true one-bedroom with a spacious living room, a full kitchen, and a loft space. Korinne and Elliott seemed excited. They liked that the building had some character and that the apartments werenโt too โcookie cutter.โ
Evaluating Their Options
The first building slipped quickly out of contention once they got a look at the next building, 45 Wall Street. This high rise featured a grand marble and wood-paneled entryway. It was a question of amenities versus space: in an older building, $2500 could get them a spacious one-bedroom. In a high rise, that same budget would get them a 500-square foot studio. (Which, itโs worth mentioning, is quite large for a studio.) But it would also get them top-notch renovations and appliances, plus access to the buildingโs gorgeous fitness center and roof deck. Whatโs more, both of the large high rise buildings we looked at were offering strong incentives. The building on Wall Streetโs November incentives included both one month free and a 1-month OP to reduce the brokerโs fee. The next building we viewed, 90 Washington Street, was advertising a choice of a 1-month OP or 1 month free.
As the morningโs apartment tour wound to a close, Korinne and Elliott told Webb that they loved two units, one in 45 Wall Street and one in 90 Washington Street. They would be in touch when they decided which one they preferred.
Application Process
On Monday morning, Elliott called to let Webb know they were ready to submit an application for a unit in 90 Washington. The unitโs start date was technically December 1st, but Webb was able to negotiate with the management company to push it back by two weeks, effectively saving the couple over a thousand dollars. He also negotiated the monthly rent down $40. And because of the buildingโs incentives, they ended up paying Webb a greatly reduced fee. Two years ago, Korinne chose to go it alone, but ended up paying a broker 15% for essentially no service; this time around, working with a broker, her entire apartment search, from first meeting to signed lease, lasted 48 hours, and she and Elliott paid just a 5% effective fee.
When Webb told me the good news, we revisited a conversation from Saturday afternoon, after Korinne and Elliott left. We had asked him if he was worried that heโd made the process too painless. Was it possible, we wondered, that the couple might not realize the true value of the apartments heโd found them, or of his service, because their experience had consisted of a breezy three-hour jaunt? What if the ease of viewing these apartments made the couple second-guess themselves, made them wonder if they were settling, if with more digging and effort they could find something better? Webb understood what we meant, but he had a good feeling about these clients, and wasnโt too concerned. โOne of the best compliments I get is โYou make it so easy!โโ he told me. โBut I just make it look easy.โ
Korinne and Elliott kept the faith, knew what they wanted, and remained committed to their apartment process. In the end, they easily found a stellar apartment that hit their search criteria.
Conclusion
We hope you’ve enjoyed these tips and found them useful.ย Make sure you review the whole list before you work with your broker!ย And don’t forget to let us know if we missed anything.
Editor’s Note: We updated this article to enhance readability.