ONEPLACERENTALS
Kensington, Brooklyn

Brooklyn

Kensington

Quiet, diverse neighborhood near Prospect Park with the F and G nearby.

Average rent
$3,100/mo
Available rentals
1
No-fee listings
1
Borough
Brooklyn

Neighborhood guide

Living in Kensington.

Kensington is one of Brooklyn's most underrated rental markets — a quiet, diverse, family-oriented neighborhood between Prospect Park and the F-train corridor, with strong pre-war stock and a growing handful of newer elevator buildings like 22 Caton Place.

The neighborhood runs roughly from Caton Avenue south to Avenue F, and from Coney Island Avenue east to McDonald Avenue, with the F and G trains at Church Avenue and Fort Hamilton Parkway anchoring the western edge. Kensington shares a border with Prospect Park's southwest corner, and many renters use the park as their backyard — the entrance at Park Circle is a five-minute walk from most of the neighborhood. The blocks immediately south of the park (East 2nd through East 5th Streets, and Caton Place itself) host the highest concentration of newer elevator inventory.

Pre-war housing dominates. Four- to six-story brick walk-ups and elevator buildings from the 1920s and 1930s line the residential blocks east of Coney Island Avenue, often with hardwood floors, original moldings, and generously sized layouts by NYC standards. Newer construction is a smaller share of the inventory but growing — 22 Caton Place is the headline newer rental, with residents' lounge, dishwasher, roof deck, and food storage, and heat and hot water included in the rent.

Transit is anchored by the F and G at Church Avenue and Fort Hamilton Parkway. The F to Bryant Park typically runs 25–30 minutes, and the F to Jay Street-MetroTech for transfers to the A, C, and R is 15–20 minutes. The G at Church Avenue is the line's southern terminus and connects to Williamsburg, Long Island City, and Court Square. The B35 and B16 buses cover east-west travel within the neighborhood, and the B68 connects directly to Park Slope and Coney Island.

Pricing reflects Kensington's quiet positioning. Renovated pre-war one-bedrooms typically rent in the high-$2,000s to low-$3,000s. Two-bedrooms in newer elevator buildings like 22 Caton Place land in the low-$5,000s — a meaningful premium for the amenity package, but still below comparable Park Slope or Cobble Hill inventory. Studios in walk-ups remain available in the high-$1,000s. Owner-paid no-fee leases are common at the larger newer buildings, and most pre-war landlords here run small operations that negotiate willingly on broker fees.

Daily life is shaped by the diversity of the community — Bangladeshi, Pakistani, Russian, Mexican, and Chinese populations all anchor commercial strips along Church Avenue, McDonald Avenue, and Coney Island Avenue. Restaurants here lean small-format and family-owned. The Greenwood Cemetery and Prospect Park bracket the neighborhood with continuous green space, and the F-train corridor provides a fast commute that most renters significantly underrate until they make the move.

Renters choose Kensington for the quiet, the park access, and the value — a renovated one-bedroom under $3,000 within walking distance of Prospect Park is genuinely rare in Brooklyn. The trade-off is a slightly slower restaurant scene than the neighborhoods immediately north and east, but the food along Church and Coney Island Avenues more than compensates.

OnePlace Rentals tracks 22 Caton Place and the pre-war inventory between Caton and Church Avenues. We verify whether a 'Kensington' listing is actually south of Prospect Park or in a neighboring submarket, confirm pet policy and elevator access before any showing, and surface owner-paid no-fee leases as they post. Multilingual agents are available in Spanish, Chinese, Russian, Bengali, Arabic, Korean, and Haitian Creole.

Building type
Pre-war walk-ups + newer elevator
Best for
Quiet, park access, real value
Transit
F, G, B35, B68
No-fee inventory
Common — owner-paid at 22 Caton
Multilingual support

Need help in another language?

Spanish · 中文 · Русский · বাংলা · العربية · Kreyòl · 한국어

Choose Your Language

Frequently asked

Kensington rental FAQ.

Are there no-fee apartments in Kensington?
Yes — OnePlace Rentals regularly lists no-fee apartments in Kensington. Browse the No-Fee section on the Kensington page or message us and we'll share the latest no-fee options.
What is the average rent in Kensington?
The average rent in Kensington is approximately $3,100 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 Kensington — 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 Kensington?

Tell us what you're looking for and a local rental expert will help — usually within an hour.

WhatsApp