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Tuesday, February 12, 2013

1br~ Over 700sq Ft~Grand Concourse

Listed by Pablo M. Garcia

Images

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Address: Grand Concourse & 181 Street
Zip: 10453
Country: USA
Price: $1,300
Bedrooms: 1
Baths: 1
Status: Active


Home Features
  • Big windows
  • Cable Ready
  • Eat-in Kitchen
  • Elevator Building
  • Great for Shares
  • Gut Renovated
  • Hardwood Floors
  • High Ceilings
  • High Speed Internet Ready
  • Lots of Closet Space
  • New Appliances
  • Pet Friendly
  • Separate Bedroom
  • Sunlight
  • Walk-up Building
Community Features
  • 30 mins From Midtown
  • Banks
  • Easy access to major highways
  • Less than an Hour From Financial District
  • Public Transportation

Train
  • 1
  • A


Tools
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Mortgage Calculator
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Neighborhood Profile



Listed by: Pablo M. Garcia
Phone: 212-544-0767
Mobile: 917-541-4532
Fax: 212-544-0766
Homepagewww.pmgrealestate.com
Info: PMG REAL ESTATE ASSOCIATES 101 Sherman Ave Frnt#1 New York, NY 10034 

Cozy Studio on Arden~Wont Last

Listed by Pablo M. Garcia

Images

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Address: Arden Street
Zip: 10034
Country: USA
Price: $975
Bedrooms: 1
Baths: 1
Status: Active


Home Features
  • Big windows
  • Elevator Building
  • Gas Range
  • Gut Renovated
  • Hardwood Floors
  • Kitchenette
  • Microwave
  • Security Cameras
Community Features
  • 30 mins From Midtown
  • Banks
  • Bike Paths
  • Bike Paths

Train

  • 1
  • A


Tools
Contact Agent
Mortgage Calculator
Printer Friendly Version of This Page
Email This Listing to a Friend

Neighborhood Links 
View a map of the area

Neighborhood Profile



Listed by: Pablo M. Garcia
Phone: 212-544-0767
Mobile: 917-541-4532
Fax: 212-544-0766
Homepagewww.pmgrealestate.com
Info: PMG REAL ESTATE ASSOCIATES 101 Sherman Ave Frnt#1 New York, NY 10034 



This listing has been viewed 145 times.

Friday, February 1, 2013

The 8 best websites for finding a no-fee apt in New York City

In a city of single-digit vacancy rates, there are some compelling reasons to pay a good real estate agent to find you a rental: You’re new in town, you’re busy, you can’t find what you want on your own, and/or you plan to stay put for a couple of years or more.
But the reasons not to work with a broker can be compelling too—such as, you can’t afford the fee (ranging anywhere from one-month’s rent to 15% of a year’s rent) or you just don’t want to pay if you can help it, and you’ve got enough time (and perseverance) to do the legwork on your own.
So where to start your search?
While New York City lacks a centralized database of no-fee rental listings, there are a number of free sites that get listings directly from landlords, management companies, and/or brokers whose fee is being paid by the owner.
To get you started, we’ve rounded up 8 websites to bookmark on your browser. Where possible, we’ve also noted the number of Manhattan listings posted in a recent 7 day period—a useful metric for the NYC rental market, where apartments can be snapped up a matter of hours, particularly during the busy April –September renting season.
You’ll find some overlap in listings on the sites below, but you’ll still need to play the field daily in order to get the most comprehensive view of what’s out there. To stay organized, may we suggest you drag-and-drop Nestio.com's handy "bookmarklet" onto your web browser, which will enable you to save interesting listings all in one place.

1. UrbanSherpa.com
Started in 2007, UrbanSherpa lists apartments from about 800 New York City owners and management companies. The advertising-supported site’s bread and butter is Manhattan south of 96th Street.
Of 2,478 active listings in Manhattan when we checked recently, 316 were posted in the last 7 days.
Each listing contains a “history” tab with information on the last price the apartment was offered at and the day it rented; there is also information on that landlord or management company’s application procedure and building amenities.
Telephone help is available, and you can sign up to receive email updates about listings that fit your search criteria.
2. StreetEasy.com
StreetEasy gets its listings from major brokerages, management companies and owners, and lets you search for apartments listed “by owner” as well as “broker, no fee.” A recent search of both types of listings in Manhattan pulled up pulled up 2,017 listings, with 453 posted in the last week.
StreetEasy requires an address for every listing, which keeps out the fake ones. The site also shows price history for every listing, so you can see the last price the apartment was listed at (though this can vary from the actual agreed-up rent), as well as other current and former availabilities in the building, neighborhood information like school zone and commutability, and much more.
Like some of the other sites mentioned here, StreetEasy lets you “save” searches and will email you about price changes and new listings that fit your parameters or are in your desired buildings. Buy “Insider” access for $10 a month and you can get hourly updates (vs daily ones), which in hot rental market can make the difference between success and failure.
3. NYBits.com
Launched in 2005, NYBits currently has around 2,800 no-fee listings from property management companies, landlords and brokers whose fee is being paid by the owner. (Broker listings are in the minority, because most decline to disclose the addresses of their listings.)
A quick search of no-fee listings in Manhattan on a recent weekend pulled up 2,129 listings, with half posted in the previous 7 days. (To filter by most recently posted, select “date posted” in the “Order Results By” line on the search form.)
For proactive apartment hunters who want to head upstream for future availabilities and apartments that may not be advertised for rent (too many vacancies can project an unwanted atmosphere of negotiability), NYBits also lists property managers and rental buildings that deal directly with renters. There are also lists of buildings by characteristic including pet friendly, pool, garage etc.
4. InsideDigs.com
Founded a little over a year ago by a frustrated renter, InsideDigs matches renters to tenants whose leases are about to expire in the next three months. If you see something interesting, you can email the tenant for the landlord or management firm’s contact information to try to rent directly and skip the broker.
Renters who aren’t planning to move are also encouraged to post reviews about their buildings and their apartments; if a review strikes your fancy, be proactive and email the tenant to find out who to contact about vacancies in the building.
InsideDigs is free to use if you review your own building or refer 5 friends to the site. With around 350 listings for NYC apartments (concentrated in downtown Manhattan, the Upper East Side and Brooklyn) whose leases are expiring within 3 months, the site is still gaining traction; it will soon also start featuring listings directly from management companies and landlords.
5. NYTimes.com
Among major NYC media outlets, The New York Times offers the most comprehensive rental database.
After checking the “no-fee” box on a recent weekend, we pulled up 6,657 listings in Manhattan alone, with 448 posted in the past 7 days.
The majority of the listings seemed to come from brokers versus landlords or management firms. Put a checkmark in the “price reduction” box to find motivated landlords who may be willing to cut you a deal.
6. UrbanEdgeNY.com
Started in 2010 by the folks behind The Online Marketing Group, which provides marketing services for New York City landlords and management firms, the no-fee listings site UrbanEdgeNY.com currently carries about 2,900 active NYC rental listings (2,100 in Manhattan) from around 400 owners, property managers and leasing firms.
Though UrbanEdge could not provide us with the number of new listings within the last 7 days, it noted that listings are automatically removed if not updated for two weeks.
Manhattan is UrbanEdge’s sweet spot, though the listings database also covers The Bronx and Northern New Jersey, and UrbanEdge is working hard to bolster its database of Queens and Brooklyn listings.
7. Rentenna.com
A relative newcomer to the NYC rental scene, the listings on start-up Rentenna.com include no-fee listings from landlords and management firms, among other sources. Its secret sauce is a 10,000-strong database of apartment buildings that can be filtered by characteristic (eg “hipster,” “budget”) and carry a livability ranking (from 1-100) based on value, amenities, neighborhood and renter reviews, among other things.
Rentenna encourages renters to log in through Facebook Connect so that, among other things, renters can see what buildings their friends have lived in, loved or hated. Renters who prefer not to log on via Facebook need merely scroll to the bottom of the homepage and click on the “Home” link to access the site directly.
 
8. Craigslist.org

Call it what you like—necessary evil, bait-and-switch.con or an addiction—Craigslist is still a viable player when it comes to finding no-fee apartments. You can search its NYC apartment rental section by “all no-fee apartments” (which includes apartments listed by owners as well as by brokers whose fee is being paid by the owner) or “by-owner apartments only.”
Keep your guard up for scams (such as too-good-to-be-true pictures, request for cash wired in exchange for keys, vague answers to simple questions like, “When is the apartment available?”) and watch out for brokers posing as owners in order to list their apartments for free.
Related:

Confessions of an on-site leasing agent
12 insider tips for renting in NYC
8 questions you MUST ask before buying renters' insurance
Guerilla Guide to Finding a No-Fee Apartment in NYC: Cut to the front of the line
The insider's guide to temporary walls
Find a roommate online: Six websites that do the heavy lifting for you
Serial Renter: Practical advice from a chronic renter


visit : www.pmgre.com
         www.pmgrealestate.com
 

Saturday, January 26, 2013

Board Authorizes Rent Increases for Rent-Stabilized Apartments



The Rent Guidelines Board voted on Thursday to approve a rise in rents on rent-stabilized apartments in New York City, authorizing increases of up to 2 percent on one-year leases and 4 percent on two-year leases.
      
In May 2012 , the board recommended increases of 1.75 to 4 percent on one-year leases, and 3.5 to 6.75 percent on two-year leases.
      
About one million apartments in the city are rent stabilized.
Last year, the nine-member board, which is appointed by Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, approved increases of up to 3.75 percent on one-year leases and 7.25 percent on two-year leases.
Adriene L. Holder, a tenant representative on the panel, said the vote was 5-to-4. The board’s two tenant representatives voted against the measure, calling for a lower increase or a rent freeze, and its two owner representatives voted against it because they did not feel the increase was high enough, Ms. Holder said.
The guidelines affect renewal leases entered into from Oct. 1, 2012 through Sept. 30, 2013.
 
sources :
 

Wednesday, January 23, 2013







Renting in New York City








Determine your budget

It is a key point to figure out what you can afford to spend a month on rent. Keep in mind other monthly expenses such as telephone/electric, food/dining out, furnishings for the apartment, clothing/dry cleaning, entertainment, etc. Most people spend 25% to 35% of their monthly gross (before tax) paycheck on rent. Most landlords prefer tenants who earn 40-50 times the amount of their monthly rent to meet their strict financial eligibility requirements, with the annual salary of a guarantor equal at least 80-100 times the monthly rent.



For example: 50 x $2,000.00 (monthly rent) = $100,000.00 (annual salary)





Organize & prepare the necessary information



Must have:

•Letter of employment and salary verification

•Your letter of employment must be typed on original company letterhead, stating position, salary and length of employment. The original copy must be provided.

•Please note that a signed offer and acceptance letter is not sufficient.

•If applicant/guarantor is self-employed we will also require: Original copy of letter from Certified Public Accountant or attorney on company letterhead verifying nature of business and income amount for the last two years.

•Bank account numbers (checking and savings), credit card numbers

•Expected Bonus-verified by employer

•Additional sources of income with verification

•Personal identification with photograph

•Tax returns (most recent 1st page & signature page)

•Two most recent bank statements

•Pay stubs (2 most recent)

•Credit report - Credit reports should be clean with prompt payment history. If applicant/Guarantor has any collection accounts, liens, or judgments against them, some landlords will require an official letter of satisfaction. If unsatisfied, the landlord may at his or her discretion require extra security deposit, a guarantor, or reject the application.


Whenever possible:

•Names, addresses and phone numbers of previous landlords

*Certain landlords are more demanding than others in terms of information needed to secure an apartment.





Find the apartment



After determining the desired NYC neighborhood, view every possibility with your rental agent. You may be looking at rental buildings, condominiums, or cooperatives. If you see an apartment you like, be prepared to make a commitment quickly.



The pace of the rental market is totally different from that of the sales market. Characteristically, a renter is operating on a deadline that requires a keen sense of timing and quick decisions. Begin the rental search 30-45 days before the move in date. Typically, monthly rents are non-negotiable in a sellers' market, and only slightly negotiable in a buyers' market.




yeah!!


Most landlords require an application to be submitted so credit checks can be made. (Cooperative buildings can be particularly demanding-potential coop renters follow the same steps as a purchaser.) This application usually requires the name, address, phone number of:



•the applicant

•applicant's employer (a letter of employment on company letterhead, signed by supervisor stating salary, guaranteed bonus, title, start date and housing allowance)

•bankers

•accountants

•last landlords

•and/or guarantor




If financial conditions are not met, a landlord may require a lease cosigner, or guarantor. Landlords prefer guarantors to be family members who live and own property in the Tri-State area.




Sign a lease & money issues






Be prepared to write out certified checks, money orders, or set-up a wire transfer from a New York area bank. When the lessee signs the lease, the following fees are paid on separate checks:



•the first month's rent

•the security deposit (usually 1 or 2 months rent)

•the real estate fee: 15% of the first annual rent for a lease of one year or more, or, one month rent for a short term lease of 3-6 months





To sign the lease, you will need some form of personal identification, preferably a driver's license or a passport. Usual application fees for Rental Buildings are $50 and up, for Condos or Co-ops, $150 and up.



Applicants should be prepared to pay the following upon lease signing:



•1st months rent

•1 month security (in some cases more than one month)

•Broker commission







Move In!




The landlord may require advanced notice to schedule the move in or out of your personal belongings. Check with the managing agent or the superintendent for details.


The process of securing an apartment can take just a few days, or a few months, depending on variables such as co-op approval, landlords time constraints, etc.



Helpful Tips for International Transfers



If you are not a U.S. citizen, pay taxes outside of the U.S. or do not have any credit history in the U.S., you may be required to pay additional security at the time of lease signing. This can be as much as two to twelve months rent in advance, depending on how hot the market is and how strict the landlord.

Here's what you will need

Must have:
•Statement of income, bonus structure, title, length of time with company, all written on company letterhead. Also, if you have any housing allowance from your employer, please make sure to include this in your letter as well. For new employees, a copy of your employment contract or letter of employment is helpful.

•Letter from your bank stating your average monthly balance. (In English)


Whenever possible:

•Letter from your landlord in departure city indicating prompt payment of rent. (In English)

•3 months credit card statements showing ability and willingness to pay debts in a timely manner. (In English)

Tips on preparing the necessary funds before coming New York:

•Try to establish a New York bank account before you begin your search. Or if not possible, talk to your bank about setting up a wire transfer. Or bring enough travelers checks to cover the costs of two months rent (which must be converted into certified checks). This comprises the first month's rent and one month's security.

•Bring funds to cover the broker's fee if your company is not paying the fee. In New York City, you, the tenant, pay brokerage fees. These fees are due upon signing of the lease.

•Bring funds to cover a Credit Check: $60 to $75.

•Bring funds to cover possible move-in/move-out fees from $250 and up. (Refundable if there is no damage)

Being prepared is vital to making the process of finding a new apartment in NYC smoother. And now that you know how to get prepared, start your search for a great new apartment today.


Resources :
http://www.citysitesny.com/nyc-rental-tips/


to see our listings please go to :

www.pmgrealestate.com

www.pmgre.com

Uptown New York Best Rental Agent

Pablo Garcia



Friday, January 18, 2013

PMG REAL ESTATE VIDEO

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Pmg Real Estate comercial.

What are the most important things you look for in a real estate professional?