
Available now
Long Island City apartments
Skip the broker fee
No-fee in Long Island City.
Neighborhood guide
Living in Long Island City.
Long Island City is the fastest-growing rental market in Queens — a waterfront skyline of new full-service towers across the East River from Midtown Manhattan, with a 24/7 ferry, four subway lines, and pricing that still undercuts comparable Manhattan inventory by 20–30 percent.
LIC sits directly across the river from the United Nations and Midtown East, and the geography defines the neighborhood. Most of the inventory renters care about is concentrated in three submarkets: the Center Boulevard / Hunters Point waterfront (the new-construction core), Court Square (the higher-density transit hub around the 7, E, M, G), and Hunters Point South (the newer towers south of the bridge). Each submarket has a distinct mix of price, view, and walk-to-train.
The waterfront is the headline. Gantry Plaza State Park and Hunters Point South Park give the neighborhood close to a mile of continuous public space along the East River, with skyline views straight to the Empire State Building and the Chrysler Building. Most of the large new-construction buildings face the water; the view premium typically runs $300–$700 per month over comparable interior units in the same building, and high-floor corner lines can exceed that.
Inventory is dominated by new-construction full-service buildings — almost every building in the waterfront core has a doorman, gym, lounge, package room, and roof deck. Common-area amenity packages here are among the strongest in NYC for the price, with several buildings offering pools, screening rooms, co-working lounges, and pet spas. Older inventory exists in Court Square and the blocks east of Jackson Avenue, with walk-ups and converted warehouses available at a discount.
Transit is excellent and underrated. The 7 train at Vernon-Jackson and Court Square reaches Grand Central in a single stop and Times Square in three. The E and M at Court Square run to Midtown's east side and the G handles north-south travel into Brooklyn. The NYC Ferry from Hunters Point South lands at Wall Street, Midtown East, and Roosevelt Island, and many waterfront renters use it as their primary commute. Bike infrastructure is strong: Queensboro Bridge access and protected lanes along Vernon and Jackson connect to Manhattan in 10–15 minutes.
Pricing tracks the building tier closely. New-construction studios in waterfront towers typically rent in the high-$2,000s to mid-$3,000s. One-bedrooms run the high-$3,000s to high-$4,000s, with skyline-view lines pushing past $5,000. Two-bedrooms in full-amenity buildings commonly land in the mid-$5,000s to high-$6,000s. Court Square and older Hunters Point inventory price 15–25 percent below the waterfront tier. No-fee leasing is the norm, not the exception — most large LIC landlords waive broker fees and offer one to two months free on 12–14 month terms during slower winter and late-summer windows.
Renters choose LIC for the math: a doorman building, in-unit laundry, a gym, a skyline view, and a 12-minute commute to Grand Central for what a comparable Manhattan walk-up would cost without any of those things. The trade-off is a slightly less established neighborhood — restaurant and retail density is improving but still lighter than Brooklyn or the East Village.
OnePlace Rentals tracks LIC concession periods in real time across the waterfront and Court Square submarkets, surfaces no-fee inventory the same day it lists, and verifies which view lines and floor ranges actually face the skyline before any showing. We help renters compare buildings side-by-side on the metrics that matter — true commute time, common-charge inclusion, pet policy, and concession math — and can run the full search in Spanish, Chinese, Russian, Bengali, Arabic, Korean, or Haitian Creole.
Need help in another language?
Spanish · 中文 · Русский · বাংলা · العربية · Kreyòl · 한국어
Similar in Queens
You might also like.
Frequently asked
Long Island City rental FAQ.
- Are there no-fee apartments in Long Island City?
- Yes — OnePlace Rentals regularly lists no-fee apartments in Long Island City. Browse the No-Fee section on the Long Island City page or message us and we'll share the latest no-fee options.
- What is the average rent in Long Island City?
- The average rent in Long Island City 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 Long Island City — 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 Long Island City?
Tell us what you're looking for and a local rental expert will help — usually within an hour.
