Why work with a broker?
The tradeoff, explained
You can absolutely search on your own — this is about whether the added access is worth it.
On your own
~No broker fee — less cash needed upfront
~Full access to public listings
~Limited to what’s publicly advertised
~Competing with everyone who sees the same listing — sometimes hundreds of applicants
~Units can go before you even hear back
~Navigating applications and issues alone
~Rent-stabilized units rarely surface publicly
~Landlord costs are baked into your rent — you just don’t see them
~And you keep paying that premium every year you stay
With a broker
+Everything you already have, plus more inventory
+Access to units that aren’t publicly listed
+Under-market rents, sometimes rent-stabilized
+Far less competition on these units
+Someone advocating for your application
+Guidance navigating any issues
+No hidden costs baked into your rent
+Often cheaper than a “no-fee” apartment once you factor in the lower monthly rent, even with a broker fee
+No obligation — free to rent on your own at any time
+One-time broker fee, only if you rent an apartment I introduce you to
Example A
Under-market unit, not publicly listed
A unit priced below comparable listings — the value is immediate access and a lower rent
Comparable listing
$2,600/mo
Found on your own, no fee
High competition
May be gone before you tour
Through broker
$2,300/mo
Under-market, not widely listed
$2,300 broker fee (1 month)
Less competition, direct introduction
You save $1,300 in year one, even after the fee
$300/mo savings x 12 = $3,600 — minus $2,300 fee = $1,300 in your pocket
Example B
Rent-stabilized unit, not publicly listed
A stabilized unit with capped annual increases — the value compounds over time
Comparable listing
$2,600/mo
Market rate, found on your own
~3% annual increases typical
No stabilization protections
Through broker, rent-stabilized
$2,300/mo
Stabilized, not widely listed
$2,300 broker fee (1 month)
See historical rent increases: Rent Guidelines Board
| Market rate total | Stabilized total | You save | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Year 1 | $31,200 | $29,900 | $1,300 |
| Year 2 | $63,336 | $58,190 | $5,146 |
| Year 3 | $96,436 | $87,194 | $9,242 |
The fee pays for itself in ~8 months
Capped increases mean the gap widens every year — $9,200+ saved by year 3
Illustrative example based on recent historical averages. Stabilized increases are set annually by the NYC Rent Guidelines Board. Broker fees included in year 1 totals. Actual rents, increases, and fees will vary by unit.
How the arrangement works
Exclusivity
Non-exclusive. Find a place on your own and you owe nothing.
Upfront cost
No retainer, no commitment, no obligation.
When fee applies
Only if you sign a lease on a unit I introduced you to.
Fee range
Typically 1 month’s rent to 15% of annual rent. Premium occasionally for exceptional units.
Ready to see what’s available?
Takes about 2 minutes — a quick acknowledgment form, then tell me what you’re looking for.
No obligation. No upfront