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Chelsea apartments
Neighborhood guide
Living in Chelsea.
Chelsea is one of the largest neighborhoods in Manhattan and one of the most amenity-dense rental markets in the city — full-service doorman buildings, new construction, and historic walk-ups all share the same street grid between 14th and 30th Streets.
The neighborhood stretches from 14th Street to roughly 30th Street, between 6th Avenue and the Hudson River. The High Line, Chelsea Market, and the gallery district along West 20s–West 27th give the area its character, while the residential blocks east of 8th Avenue keep it grounded. Chelsea has the most diverse architectural inventory of any Manhattan neighborhood — six-story walk-ups, mid-century elevator buildings, post-war doorman towers, and brand-new High Line construction often appear on the same block.
The west side along 10th and 11th Avenues has the highest concentration of new construction and large doorman buildings, many with gyms, pools, roof decks, and concierge service. The center of the neighborhood is dominated by pre-war elevator buildings and a strip of Mitchell-Lama and former Mitchell-Lama housing. East Chelsea and the streets around 6th Avenue have more walk-up and townhouse inventory at lower price points.
Transit access is among the best in Manhattan. The 1, 2, 3 along 7th Avenue; the A, C, E along 8th Avenue; the F, M along 6th Avenue; the L at 8th Avenue; and the 7 extension at Hudson Yards collectively serve every corner of the neighborhood. The PATH at 14th and 23rd is heavily used by Jersey-bound renters. From most Chelsea apartments, four or more subway lines are within a five-minute walk.
Pricing varies more by building type than by exact location. Walk-up one-bedrooms typically rent in the high-$3,000s to mid-$4,000s. Doorman and amenity buildings push one-bedrooms to $5,000–$6,500. New construction along the High Line frequently exceeds $7,500 for a one-bedroom and $10,000–$15,000 for a two-bedroom. Studios in older buildings remain available in the low-$3,000s, often with original details like exposed brick and decorative fireplaces.
The food and culture density is unusual for an uptown-adjacent neighborhood. Chelsea Market is a destination food hall. The gallery district hosts hundreds of contemporary art exhibitions on a rolling six-week cycle. The High Line provides 1.5 miles of elevated park space connecting the neighborhood to Hudson Yards and the Meatpacking District. Restaurants along 8th Avenue and Hudson Yards span every price point.
Chelsea is the default Manhattan choice for renters who want a doorman, a gym in the building, and proximity to multiple subway lines without committing to Midtown. No-fee inventory is significant — most large management companies operate here, and direct-to-renter leasing is common. Many large buildings run year-round concession periods that effectively reduce first-year rent by 5–10%.
OnePlace Rentals tracks Chelsea inventory daily across walk-up, doorman, and High Line new construction, and flags landlord-paid concession periods as they post so renters see the real effective rent rather than the headline number. We help narrow the borough's widest amenity selection — gym, roof deck, pool, concierge, parking — to what actually matters for your commute and budget, and we coordinate showings across multiple buildings in one afternoon when timelines are tight. Multilingual support is available end-to-end in Spanish, Chinese, Russian, Bengali, Arabic, Korean, and Haitian Creole.
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Frequently asked
Chelsea rental FAQ.
- Are there no-fee apartments in Chelsea?
- Yes — OnePlace Rentals regularly lists no-fee apartments in Chelsea. Browse the No-Fee section on the Chelsea page or message us and we'll share the latest no-fee options.
- What is the average rent in Chelsea?
- The average rent in Chelsea is approximately $4,900 per month. Actual prices depend on size, building, and time of year.
- Can I schedule a showing with OnePlace?
- Yes. Text, WhatsApp, email, or schedule a call and a licensed agent will set up showings in Chelsea — usually within the day.
- Does OnePlace offer help in other languages?
- OnePlace Rentals supports renters in English, Spanish, Chinese, Bengali, Haitian Creole, Russian, Arabic, and Korean.
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