From waterfront condos near Gantry Plaza State Park to modern residences close to Court Square and Queens Plaza, I help Long Island City sellers price, position, and market their properties with clarity, strategy, and confidence.
Long Island City stands out because it offers one of Queens’ most visible and competitive condo markets, supported by waterfront parks, ferry access, multiple subway lines, and strong buyer recognition. That creates real seller opportunity, but it also means pricing and positioning need to be sharp from day one.
Selling a home in Long Island City is not just about putting it online. It is about pricing it correctly, presenting it with intention, attracting the right buyers, and negotiating from a position of clarity in a market where towers, amenities, and exact location can materially change perceived value.
I help you price based on real Long Island City market behavior, not generic borough averages or inflated expectations.
I help your property stand out by focusing on the details LIC buyers care about most, including building quality, amenities, location, light, and monthly value.
I guide the details that improve perception, reduce objections, and strengthen how the home performs in photos, showings, and online.
From preparation through listing, negotiation, and closing, I help you move through the sale with more confidence and less guesswork.
Why sell in Long Island City? Because buyers continue to value neighborhoods that combine convenience, waterfront lifestyle, and long-term visibility. LIC offers all three. The area benefits from Gantry Plaza State Park, Hunters Point South, multiple subway lines, ferry service, and a development pipeline that keeps the neighborhood front-of-mind for buyers who want Queens access with a city-facing lifestyle. The city’s OneLIC plan also signals long-term public investment and future growth.
What is the Long Island City housing market like right now for sellers? It is a market where building type, exact location, and product mix matter a lot. Realtor.com shows a median listing price of $1,077,500, a listing price per square foot of $1,545, and a median monthly rental price of $4,300. PropertyShark reports a Q2 2026 median sale price of $685,000, which is materially lower than current list benchmarks and reinforces that sellers need to price against the right comparable sales, not just the most aspirational active inventory.
A neighborhood-wide list benchmark is not a pricing strategy. Closed-sale medians can diverge sharply from active asking prices. Sellers need building-specific interpretation, not just a headline number.
Buyers in LIC pay close attention to common charges, taxes, and amenities. A beautiful unit can still face resistance if the monthly numbers feel off. Positioning has to match the likely buyer profile.
Overpricing weakens early momentum. Correct pricing improves showing activity and buyer confidence. Better early positioning often leads to stronger negotiations later.
Many owners underestimate the real cost of holding. Selling can simplify the next move. A clear equity picture changes the decision.
Market conditions do not stay static. Strong presentation matters most when sellers are ready to act. Waiting without a strategy is different from timing intentionally.
Selling lets you make the next move around your goals. A well-planned sale reduces uncertainty. Good advice helps owners compare both paths more objectively.
That level of rent can look attractive, but the right decision still depends on your exact property type, carrying costs, tax picture, and long-term goals.
Example scenario: Sell now vs. hold as a rental in Long Island City
Holding can make sense for some owners. Selling can make sense for owners who want liquidity, less management responsibility, a cleaner next move, or the chance to capitalize on current pricing. In Long Island City, where carrying costs and pricing vary significantly by building, sellers often benefit from understanding the true current value of their exact unit before deciding to hold it long term.

Anyone can list a property. Real seller value comes from making sure the home enters the market in a way that earns attention and builds confidence. I help Long Island City sellers identify what matters most before launch: pricing, presentation, photography readiness, buyer objections, and the story the property should tell based on building type, skyline or waterfront appeal, and commute convenience.

In Long Island City real estate, the best offer is not always the highest one on paper. It is the offer that balances price, financing strength, timing, contingencies, and the likelihood of closing smoothly. I help sellers evaluate offers clearly and negotiate with their real goals in mind.
Selling your first home in Long Island City can feel overwhelming, especially if you are balancing timing, pricing questions, carrying costs, and your next move all at once. My job is to simplify the process, explain each step clearly, and help you make informed decisions from start to finish.
Start with a real market-value review, a pricing strategy, and a clear understanding of what your property needs before it goes live.
For many owners, yes, but the answer depends on building type, condition, carrying costs, and pricing discipline. Current published benchmarks still show strong listing values and very high rents.
Not always. Some units benefit from selective updates or staging, while others do better with strong photography, sharp pricing, and better positioning rather than major renovation.
Long Island City works for buyers who want waterfront access, strong transit, modern residential options, and a more city-facing lifestyle. That gives sellers a real advantage: the property can be marketed not just as a home, but as part of one of Queens’ most visible and connected neighborhoods. When pricing and presentation are handled correctly, that neighborhood identity can help support stronger buyer interest.
It can be, but the right answer depends on your property type, building costs, condition, and pricing strategy. Current published benchmarks still show a $1,077,500 median listing price and $4,300 median monthly rent, while closed-sale medians remain meaningfully lower, which makes pricing discipline critical.
That depends on building type, exact location, condition, layout, common charges, taxes, and buyer demand. A neighborhood average or median is only a starting point, not a final pricing strategy.
Price it correctly, prepare it strategically, market it to the right buyer pool, and negotiate based on the full strength of each offer, not just the top-line number.
Not always. Some sellers benefit from selective updates, staging, and cosmetic improvements, while others do better by focusing on presentation, photography, and pricing strategy instead of major work.
Start with a pricing consultation, a review of your property’s market position, and a step-by-step plan for preparation, listing, negotiation, and closing.
If you are thinking about selling your home in Long Island City, let’s make the next step clear. Whether you are pricing a condo, preparing a waterfront unit for market, or deciding whether to sell now or hold, I will help you move forward with a strategy built around your goals — not guesswork.
Behind every successful sale is the same commitment — honest advice, deep local knowledge, and a relentless focus on her clients’ outcomes. Agatha doesn’t just know the Queens market. She has lived and breathed it for over two decades.
To be the most trusted real estate resource in Queens — the agent every buyer, seller, and investor turns to first, knowing they'll get honest answers and exceptional results.
To guide every client through one of the most important financial decisions of their life with clarity, integrity, and the kind of local expertise that only 15+ years in Queens can provide.