ONEPLACERENTALS
Greenpoint, Brooklyn

Brooklyn

Greenpoint

Polish heritage meets new restaurants and quiet streets.

Average rent
$3,900/mo
Available rentals
1
No-fee listings
1
Borough
Brooklyn

Skip the broker fee

No-fee in Greenpoint.

Neighborhood guide

Living in Greenpoint.

Greenpoint is Brooklyn's northernmost neighborhood — a quiet, low-rise rental market with a strong Polish heritage, new waterfront towers, and the kind of walkable retail strip on Manhattan Avenue that has kept it residential while Williamsburg densified around it.

The neighborhood runs from McGuinness Boulevard west to the East River, and from Newtown Creek north to McCarren Park. Within those boundaries the inventory splits cleanly. East Greenpoint — the blocks around Manhattan Avenue, Java, India, Kent, and Driggs — is dominated by two- and three-family townhouses, four-story pre-war walk-ups, and a small number of mid-rise elevator buildings. The waterfront west of West Street is the new-construction core, with full-amenity towers (Greenpoint Landing, The Greenpoint, 41 Blue Slip) facing Manhattan across the East River.

The waterfront has redefined the neighborhood in the last decade. WNYC Transmitter Park, Newtown Barge Park, and the planned waterfront esplanade give residents nearly continuous public space along the river, with skyline views straight to Midtown Manhattan. Most new-construction buildings face the water; the view premium typically runs $300–$600 per month, and high-floor corner lines can exceed that.

Transit is anchored by the G train, which runs along Manhattan Avenue with stops at Greenpoint Avenue and Nassau. The G is Greenpoint's primary connection — to Williamsburg, Long Island City, and Court Square (where it transfers to the 7, E, M for Manhattan). NYC Ferry's Greenpoint stop at India Street has become a serious commuting option, with direct service to Wall Street, Midtown East, and Long Island City. The L train at Bedford is a 15-minute walk or a short bike ride. Many Greenpoint renters bike — the McGuinness and Franklin protected lanes connect directly to the Pulaski and Williamsburg bridges.

Pricing splits cleanly between the two submarkets. Pre-war walk-up one-bedrooms in East Greenpoint typically rent in the mid-$3,000s to high-$3,000s. Renovated townhouse-floor two-bedrooms with outdoor space commonly land in the mid-$4,000s to high-$5,000s. New-construction one-bedrooms in waterfront towers run high-$4,000s to high-$5,000s, with two-bedrooms commonly $6,500–$9,000 and three-bedrooms reaching well into the five figures for full-amenity buildings. Studios remain available in older buildings in the high-$2,000s to low-$3,000s.

Manhattan Avenue is the spine of the neighborhood and a defining reason renters choose Greenpoint over Williamsburg. Polish bakeries, butchers, and delis sit alongside newer coffee shops, restaurants, and boutiques — a working retail strip that hasn't been replaced by chain stores. Franklin Street and the blocks near the waterfront have a denser concentration of newer restaurants and bars, but the overall feel of the neighborhood remains residential and walkable in a way Williamsburg, immediately south, no longer is.

Greenpoint rewards renters who want Williamsburg's amenities and waterfront access without Williamsburg's density and crowds. The trade-off is a longer subway commute — the G is the slowest of the main Brooklyn lines into Manhattan — but the NYC Ferry and the protected bike infrastructure offset that meaningfully for renters whose work isn't a straight L-train ride.

OnePlace Rentals tracks both Greenpoint submarkets daily, including no-fee inventory in the new waterfront towers and direct-to-renter listings in East Greenpoint that often never reach the major aggregators. We verify whether a 'Greenpoint' listing is actually on the waterfront or seven blocks east, confirm renovation level and outdoor space, and surface concession periods on the large buildings. Multilingual agents are available in Spanish, Chinese, Russian, Bengali, Arabic, Korean, Haitian Creole, and Polish by request.

Building type
Pre-war townhouses + new waterfront towers
Best for
Renters who want quiet + Manhattan views
Transit
G, NYC Ferry, bike (L at Bedford)
No-fee inventory
Common in new waterfront towers
Multilingual support

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Frequently asked

Greenpoint rental FAQ.

Are there no-fee apartments in Greenpoint?
Yes — OnePlace Rentals regularly lists no-fee apartments in Greenpoint. Browse the No-Fee section on the Greenpoint page or message us and we'll share the latest no-fee options.
What is the average rent in Greenpoint?
The average rent in Greenpoint is approximately $3,900 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 Greenpoint — 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.

Want to live in Greenpoint?

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