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Apartments near Nolita
Neighborhood guide
Living in Nolita.
Nolita — short for North of Little Italy — is one of Manhattan's smallest neighborhoods by footprint but one of the most distinctive. The neighborhood sits between Houston, Lafayette, Broome, and the Bowery, and most renters can walk its full length in under ten minutes.
Mott, Mulberry, and Elizabeth Streets form the spine of the neighborhood. They're lined with low-rise tenement buildings, boutique retail, restaurants, and cafés. The streetscape is denser than SoHo just to the west and quieter than the Lower East Side just to the east — it's one of the few downtown neighborhoods where renters can sit at a sidewalk café without traffic noise.
Inventory is dominated by pre-war walk-up tenements, typically four to six stories. Layouts skew small — studios, one-bedrooms, and railroad two-bedrooms — with renovated units featuring exposed brick, original tin ceilings, and reclaimed-wood floors. Elevator and doorman buildings are rare; most of the larger inventory in this area is just across the line in SoHo or the Lower East Side. The total rental footprint of the neighborhood is small enough that new listings often turn over within a week.
Transit is excellent for a neighborhood this small. The 6 at Spring and Bleecker, the B, D, F, M at Broadway-Lafayette, the J, Z at Bowery, and the N, R, Q, W at Prince and Canal collectively put nearly every subway line within a five-minute walk. The neighborhood is also one of the most bikeable in Manhattan — the Bowery bike lane runs the eastern edge and connects to the Manhattan Bridge.
Pricing is among the highest per square foot in downtown Manhattan. Walk-up studios typically rent in the low-$3,000s. One-bedrooms run the mid-$4,000s to high-$5,000s, depending on renovation level. Two-bedrooms are scarce and often command a premium relative to other downtown neighborhoods — renovated two-bedroom railroad layouts can exceed $6,500. Top-floor units with private roof access regularly cross $7,000 even in walk-up buildings.
The retail and restaurant identity of Nolita is one of the strongest in Manhattan. The blocks between Spring and Houston, on Mott, Mulberry, and Elizabeth, host a concentration of independent boutiques, jewelry studios, vintage shops, and small restaurants that draws shoppers from across the city. Bars and restaurants here lean toward the small-and-intimate end of the spectrum; Nolita has very few large-format spaces.
Renters choose Nolita over surrounding neighborhoods for the scale — it has the density and walkability of the East Village without the late-night noise, and the architectural character of SoHo without the retail crowds. The trade-off is small inventory and limited amenity buildings; most renters here are signing for character and location rather than space or services.
OnePlace Rentals tracks the small but fast-moving Nolita inventory daily and alerts renters within hours of a new walk-up listing — most units here lease within a week, so timing matters more than in larger neighborhoods. We verify renovation level, top-floor access, and decorative details (tin ceilings, original fireplaces, working decorative mantels) before the showing, and coordinate quickly with the small landlords who dominate the area. Multilingual agents are available for renters who prefer Spanish, Chinese, Russian, Bengali, Arabic, Korean, or Haitian Creole.
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Frequently asked
Nolita rental FAQ.
- Are there no-fee apartments in Nolita?
- Yes — OnePlace Rentals regularly lists no-fee apartments in Nolita. Browse the No-Fee section on the Nolita page or message us and we'll share the latest no-fee options.
- What is the average rent in Nolita?
- The average rent in Nolita is approximately $5,200 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 Nolita — 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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