Money & Taxes
Manhattan Closing Costs Can Include State and City Transfer Taxes
A Manhattan purchase can trigger state transfer tax, mansion tax, and New York City RPTT math.
Published June 23, 2026 · Last verified June 23, 2026
Manhattan closing-cost estimates can go sideways when transfer taxes are collapsed into one vague line. New York State has a real estate transfer tax and an additional tax on residential transfers at the $1 million threshold, commonly called the mansion tax. New York City also has its own Real Property Transfer Tax.
Those are separate pieces of math, and the contract can affect who pays what. Property type, price, financing, local custom, and negotiated terms can all matter. A buyer should not rely on a broker’s rough spreadsheet once the offer starts to feel real.
Ask the attorney or title company to show the state transfer tax, the additional tax if it applies, and NYC RPTT as separate lines. Then update the number before the emotional part of the bid takes over. In Manhattan, clear closing math is not glamorous, but it can save a hard conversation later. The local texture here is not romance, even if the apartment is lovely. Manhattan deals move through attorneys, managing agents, lenders, title people, co-op boards, condo waivers, and city forms. Clean transfer-tax math gives that whole parade a sturdier number to work from. It is the unglamorous part that keeps the glamorous part honest.