Can you afford Upper East Side?
Income needed for the $3,550/month median 1-bedroom in Manhattan.
Median 1-BR rent
$3,550/mo
Borough
Manhattan
Transit to Midtown
12 min
Price tier
High
Required income at each lifestyle tier
Gross annual income (pre-tax) required for the $3,550 median rent at each rent-to-income ceiling. Rough estimates for a single filer; the calculator below does the precise math.
Frugal (30%)
$208,740/yr
Moderate (35%)
$178,920/yr
Comfortable (40%)
$156,555/yr
Estimates use a 32% combined effective rate (federal + NY State + NYC tax + FICA + SDI/PFL) for the $80-200k single-filer band. Use the calculator below for your exact income and filing status.
Quick check for Upper East Side
You'd take home about $5,578/month. Recommended rent range: $1,116–$1,952.
Upper East Side median 1-BR rent is $3,550. Your ceiling falls $1,598 short of the median.
Want the full breakdown (debt, household, every neighborhood)? Run the full affordability calculator →
About Upper East Side
Upper East Side is a Manhattan neighborhood with a median 1-bedroom asking rent of $3,550/month — meaningfully cheaper than Manhattan's median of $3,990. The vibe is concise: doormen, museums, quiet at night.
Transit to Midtown averages 12 minutes, which is an unusually short commute for Manhattan. That number is a one-way subway time during off-peak; rush-hour reality can run 5-10 minutes longer.
It sits in the high tier ($3,500–$4,800), reflecting either premium location (proximity to Midtown, the parks, the waterfront) or a neighborhood that has gentrified meaningfully over the last 10-20 years.
If you're using the affordability calculator to test Upper East Side, the question to ask is whether your recommended rent ceiling clears $3,550. At a frugal lifestyle (30% of net income on rent), that requires meaningfully higher gross income than at moderate (35%) or comfortable (40%). The full /afford tool models the exact thresholds with your debt and household size; the quick check above is calibrated for a single renter with no debt.
Similar Manhattan neighborhoods
Closest median rents in the same borough — usually the next options to evaluate.
Common questions about Upper East Side
What salary do I need to afford Upper East Side?
The median 1-bedroom asking rent in Upper East Side is about $3,550/month. The simple-but-useful answer: at a 30% rent ceiling (frugal lifestyle), you need monthly net income of roughly $11,833. At 35% (moderate) it drops to about $10,143 net per month. The calculator above does the full federal/state/NYC tax math for any gross income you enter — that's the more accurate number to use.
Is Upper East Side a good NYC neighborhood?
Upper East Side is a Manhattan neighborhood — doormen, museums, quiet at night. "Good" depends on lifestyle: someone optimizing for nightlife will rate Upper East Side differently than someone optimizing for school district or commute time. The data points to keep in mind: 12 minutes to Midtown by subway, median 1-bedroom around $3,550/month.
How long is the commute from Upper East Side to Midtown?
About 12 minutes on the subway during off-peak hours, one way. Rush-hour reality typically adds 5-10 minutes due to crowding and minor delays. For specific lines and stops, check /subway for current MTA alerts.
Is $3,550 a fair rent for Upper East Side?
$3,550 is the median 1-bedroom asking rent from current listings (StreetEasy, RentHop, Craigslist, LeaseBreak aggregated via Leaseswap NYC), last refreshed May 2026. That means roughly half the 1-bedroom listings in Upper East Side ask more, and roughly half ask less. Specific units vary based on building age, walk-up vs elevator, square footage, and how recently the lease was set. A unit asking 20-30% above this number isn't necessarily overpriced — it might be a luxury building in the same neighborhood.
Where should I look if Upper East Side is too expensive?
Use the main /afford tool — set Manhattan as your borough preference and the calculator will surface every cheaper option on our curated list, sorted by transit time. The "stretch options" zone shows what opens up if you flex 5 percentage points on the rent ceiling. For neighborhoods we don't cover, the general rule of thumb in NYC is: the next stop further out on the same line is usually 10-20% cheaper for the same overall feel.