From historic downtown apartment towers to portfolios in neighborhoods adjacent to Center City, sales of Philadelphia multifamily properties are picking up.
The 21-unit apartment building at 1001 Pine St. in Center City was recently sold.
by Paul Schwedelson
Published Nov. 30, 2025,
The apartment building at 723 N. 16th St. in the Fairmount neighborhood was sold as part of a portfolio.
‘Attitudes are just changing’
CBRE’s Spencer Yablon, who represented Brookfield Properties in the sale of 1835 Arch, described the capital market as having “cautious optimism.” When a glut of new apartments were delivered in recent years, developers waited to start new projects until occupancy rates climbed back. Yablon said the city is in the “seventh or eighth inning” of new supply being absorbed. Yablon predicts by Labor Day 2026, supply and demand will be balanced out in most parts of Philadelphia.
“Once you get into balance, you can start to see a little rent growth, high occupancy, not as many concessions,” Yablon said. Those characteristics are attractive to buyers. With another interest rate cut potentially coming soon, Bilynsky has observed a difference in buyers. The sellers she’s heard from who weren’t in a rush to sell are now reevaluating if now is the right time to unload properties.
“People’s attitudes are just changing,” Bilynsky said. “There’s been a shift where people are now out there doing deals. A year ago, they were sitting back and waiting to see what was going to happen.”
The neighborhoods in and around Center City have been the most active, Bilynsky said.
The Sterling, a 534-unit building at 1815 John F. Kennedy Blvd., was listed for sale in September and the 80-unit Rittenhouse Row at 1601 Sansom St. was listed in May. A recent Realtor.com report found that interest in Philadelphia-area apartments has come more from renters outside the region than in it, largely due to interest from New York transplants.
Following the election of Zohran Mamdani for mayor, Wellar said New York multifamily investors are also showing interest in Philadelphia. Mamdani has proposed to freeze rent for rent stabilized units, drawing opposition from apartment owners.
“We’re getting more and more calls from New York buyers,” Wellar said.

