Crown Heights rent-stabilized apartments

Apartments in Crown Heights buildings with rent-stabilized units

19 apartments in Crown Heights buildings with rent-stabilized units, available now. Every building is cross-referenced against the DHCR registry. Updated July 2026.
  • Brooklyn
  • DHCR-verified buildings
  • Updated July 2026

Want the full picture first? Read the rent-stabilized apartments guide

Every listing here is cross-referenced against the New York State DHCR building registry, the official list of buildings containing rent-stabilized units. A match means the building appears in that registry, not that the specific unit is rent-stabilized or that it carries a promised legal rent. Stabilization status is set at the building level, and individual apartments can vary. Always verify a unit's status and rent history directly with DHCR before signing a lease.

Map of Crown Heights rent-stabilized buildings
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19 DHCR-verified listings in Crown Heights

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Newest listings
DHCR building matchStreetEasy
757 Empire Boulevard, Brooklyn, Ny, 11213Weeksville
$1,900/mo1 bed
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DHCR building matchStreetEasy
919 Park Place, Brooklyn, Ny, 11213Crown Heights
$3,000/mo1 bed
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DHCR building matchStreetEasy
791 Sterling Place, Brooklyn, Ny, 11216Crown Heights
$3,193/mo1 bed
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DHCR building matchStreetEasy
673 Classon Avenue, Brooklyn, Ny, 11238Crown Heights
$3,995/mo2 bed
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DHCR building matchStreetEasy
1332 Sterling Place, Brooklyn, Ny, 11213Weeksville
$2,550/mo1 bed
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DHCR building matchStreetEasy
489 Montgomery Street, Brooklyn, Ny, 11225Crown Heights
$2,550/mo1 bed
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DHCR building matchStreetEasy
909 Saint Johns Place, Brooklyn, Ny, 11216Crown Heights
$2,750/moStudio
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DHCR building matchStreetEasy
732 Saint Mark'S Avenue, Brooklyn, Ny, 11216Crown Heights
$3,750/mo3 bed
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DHCR building matchStreetEasy
12 Ford Street, Brooklyn, Ny, 11213Weeksville
$3,245/mo2 bed
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DHCR building matchStreetEasy
209 Troy Avenue, Brooklyn, Ny, 11213Weeksville
$2,699/mo1 bed
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DHCR building matchStreetEasy
341 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, Ny, 11216Crown Heights
$3,770/mo1 bed
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DHCR building matchStreetEasy
1598 Pacific Street, Brooklyn, Ny, 11213Crown Heights
$2,900/mo2 bed
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DHCR building matchStreetEasy
481 Montgomery Street, Brooklyn, Ny, 11225Crown Heights
$2,600/mo2 bed
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DHCR building matchStreetEasy
1266 Pacific Street, Brooklyn, Ny, 11216Crown Heights
$7,000/mo4 bed
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DHCR building matchLeasebreak
941 Washington Avenue, Crown Heights, NY, 11225Crown Heights
$4,650/mo3 bed
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DHCR building matchStreetEasy
1526 Park Place, Brooklyn, Ny, 11213Weeksville
$3,499/mo3 bed
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DHCR building matchStreetEasy
194 Utica Avenue, Brooklyn, Ny, 11213Weeksville
$4,358/mo4 bed
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DHCR building matchStreetEasy
334 Montgomery Street, Brooklyn, Ny, 11225Crown Heights
$2,400/mo1 bed
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DHCR building matchLeasebreak
473 Park Place, Crown Heights, NY, 11238Crown Heights
$4,200/mo1 bed
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Nearby neighborhoods

Back to Brooklyn rent-stabilized apartments

Related guide
The NYC rent-stabilized apartments guideWhat rent stabilization means, how DHCR verification works, and your rights as a stabilized tenant.
FAQs

Common questions

What does "rent-stabilized" mean?
Rent stabilization is a New York State system that limits annual rent increases and gives tenants protections like automatic lease renewal, generally covering buildings of 6 or more units built before January 1, 1974, plus certain buildings receiving tax benefits. It applies at the building level: a building can contain rent-stabilized units, but individual apartments within it can still be non-stabilized depending on their history. Leaseswap never claims a specific unit is rent-stabilized, only that its building appears in the DHCR registry of buildings containing rent-stabilized units.
How does Leaseswap verify rent-stabilized buildings?
Every listing address is cross-referenced against the New York State Division of Homes and Community Renewal (DHCR) building registry, the official list of buildings containing rent-stabilized units. A match means the building appears in that registry, not that the specific listed apartment carries stabilized status or a specific legal rent. Renters should always verify a unit’s status and rent history directly with DHCR before signing a lease.
How often is this list updated?
Listing inventory updates continuously as new units post and existing ones are taken. The DHCR building registry match is re-run as part of Leaseswap’s enrichment pipeline, and the counts on this page reflect live search results, not a static snapshot.
How do I get alerts for new rent-stabilized listings?
Create a free Leaseswap search alert with the rent-stabilized filter turned on, and you will get notified as soon as a new listing in a DHCR-registered building matches your borough, budget, and bedroom count.
Is a rent-stabilized apartment the same as rent-controlled?
No. Rent control applies only where a tenant or successor has occupied continuously since before July 1, 1971, a small and shrinking pool, typically in pre-1947 buildings. Rent stabilization is the much larger system and is what this page tracks. Both limit rent increases, but they are governed by different rules.
What is the difference between "listed as rent-stabilized" and a DHCR building match?
They are two different signals. "Listed as rent-stabilized" means the poster describes the specific unit as rent-stabilized in the listing copy, an unverified, unit-level claim that Leaseswap has not confirmed. A "DHCR building match" means Leaseswap cross-referenced the building address against the official DHCR registry of buildings containing rent-stabilized units, a verified but building-level signal, since individual apartments within a matched building can still be non-stabilized. A listing can carry either signal, both, or neither. Renters should always verify a specific unit's status and rent history directly with DHCR before signing a lease.