State ranking · HUD FMR
New York: Most Expensive Counties
The highest-cost counties in New York by 1-bedroom Fair Market Rent, FY 2026.
- $2,655
- Priciest 1BR - Bronx County
- $1,315
- NY avg 1BR
- 50
- Counties ranked
The most expensive county for rent in New York is Bronx County with a 1-bedroom FMR of $2,655/mo, which is 102% above the state average of $1,315. The national average 1-bedroom FMR is $959.
What "most expensive" really means for New York renters
These rankings come straight from HUD's FY 2026 Fair Market Rent schedule, which reports the 40th percentile of gross rents (utilities included, except telephone) for every county in New York. The top entry is Bronx County with a 1-bedroom at $2,655, a studio at $2,529, 2-bedroom at $2,910, 3-bedroom at $3,644, and 4-bedroom at $3,959. Because HUD sets FMR per county (or per metro FMR area), these figures are the ceilings local housing authorities use to calibrate Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher payment standards, typically between 90% and 110% of FMR, which means they also approximate the moderate end of each county's documented rental market.
Compared with the New York state average of $1,315 for a 1-bedroom, the most expensive county is 102% above the state benchmark, and 177% above the US average of $959. High-rent counties almost always cluster in dense metropolitan FMR areas where housing supply is constrained, transit access is strong, and local wages support premium rents, which is also why voucher recipients frequently find fewer units at payment-standard rates in these counties without the help of HUD's Small Area FMR program. The ranking across all 50 counties shows the intra-state spread: moving between a top-ranked county and a mid-ranked one can mean hundreds of dollars per month in baseline rent before any amenity premium.
For budgeting, the 30% affordability rule says a household needs roughly $106,200/year to afford the most expensive 1-bedroom FMR in New York without being cost-burdened, well above the $52,600/year needed to afford the state average. That gap translates directly into rent-burden rates: counties at the top of this list tend to have the highest share of households paying more than 30% of income for rent, and the highest share of severely burdened renters (above 50% of income). Pair this ranking with the year-over-year FMR growth and rent burden pages to see whether today's most expensive counties are still tightening, or whether lower-ranked counties are catching up fastest.
Top 50 Most Expensive Counties in New York
| # | County | 1-BR | 2-BR | 3-BR | vs State Avg |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Bronx County | $2,655 | $2,910 | $3,644 | +102% |
| 2 | Kings County | $2,655 | $2,910 | $3,644 | +102% |
| 3 | New York County | $2,655 | $2,910 | $3,644 | +102% |
| 4 | Putnam County | $2,655 | $2,910 | $3,644 | +102% |
| 5 | Queens County | $2,655 | $2,910 | $3,644 | +102% |
| 6 | Richmond County | $2,655 | $2,910 | $3,644 | +102% |
| 7 | Rockland County | $2,655 | $2,910 | $3,644 | +102% |
| 8 | Westchester County | $2,655 | $2,910 | $3,644 | +102% |
| 9 | Nassau County | $2,379 | $2,747 | $3,563 | +81% |
| 10 | Suffolk County | $2,379 | $2,747 | $3,563 | +81% |
| 11 | Dutchess County | $1,549 | $1,979 | $2,511 | +18% |
| 12 | Orange County | $1,549 | $1,979 | $2,511 | +18% |
| 13 | Tompkins County | $1,466 | $1,753 | $2,102 | +11% |
| 14 | Albany County | $1,417 | $1,702 | $2,041 | +8% |
| 15 | Rensselaer County | $1,417 | $1,702 | $2,041 | +8% |
| 16 | Saratoga County | $1,417 | $1,702 | $2,041 | +8% |
| 17 | Schenectady County | $1,417 | $1,702 | $2,041 | +8% |
| 18 | Schoharie County | $1,417 | $1,702 | $2,041 | +8% |
| 19 | Ulster County | $1,386 | $1,818 | $2,245 | +5% |
| 20 | Columbia County | $1,263 | $1,434 | $1,730 | -4% |
| 21 | Livingston County | $1,256 | $1,573 | $1,895 | -4% |
| 22 | Monroe County | $1,256 | $1,573 | $1,895 | -4% |
| 23 | Ontario County | $1,256 | $1,573 | $1,895 | -4% |
| 24 | Orleans County | $1,256 | $1,573 | $1,895 | -4% |
| 25 | Wayne County | $1,256 | $1,573 | $1,895 | -4% |
| 26 | Erie County | $1,139 | $1,343 | $1,640 | -13% |
| 27 | Niagara County | $1,139 | $1,343 | $1,640 | -13% |
| 28 | Madison County | $1,123 | $1,392 | $1,691 | -15% |
| 29 | Onondaga County | $1,123 | $1,392 | $1,691 | -15% |
| 30 | Oswego County | $1,123 | $1,392 | $1,691 | -15% |
| 31 | Greene County | $1,118 | $1,373 | $1,813 | -15% |
| 32 | Hamilton County | $1,089 | $1,429 | $1,713 | -17% |
| 33 | Jefferson County | $1,071 | $1,405 | $1,907 | -19% |
| 34 | Sullivan County | $1,070 | $1,302 | $1,811 | -19% |
| 35 | Warren County | $1,066 | $1,348 | $1,742 | -19% |
| 36 | Washington County | $1,066 | $1,348 | $1,742 | -19% |
| 37 | Clinton County | $980 | $1,246 | $1,494 | -25% |
| 38 | Chemung County | $978 | $1,283 | $1,606 | -26% |
| 39 | Otsego County | $965 | $1,228 | $1,472 | -27% |
| 40 | Cortland County | $960 | $1,198 | $1,510 | -27% |
| 41 | Genesee County | $953 | $1,168 | $1,400 | -28% |
| 42 | Herkimer County | $926 | $1,172 | $1,405 | -30% |
| 43 | Oneida County | $926 | $1,172 | $1,405 | -30% |
| 44 | Seneca County | $921 | $1,169 | $1,550 | -30% |
| 45 | Essex County | $903 | $1,185 | $1,455 | -31% |
| 46 | Montgomery County | $899 | $1,102 | $1,381 | -32% |
| 47 | Cayuga County | $889 | $1,124 | $1,463 | -32% |
| 48 | Delaware County | $884 | $1,033 | $1,437 | -33% |
| 49 | Schuyler County | $875 | $1,148 | $1,508 | -33% |
| 50 | Steuben County | $871 | $1,081 | $1,410 | -34% |
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Methodology
Rankings are based on FY 2026 Fair Market Rents (FMR) published by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). FMR represents the 40th percentile of gross rents for standard quality units in a given area. Counties are ranked by 1-bedroom FMR in descending order. "vs State Avg" compares each county's 1-bedroom FMR to the New York average.
Read our methodology - how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.