One-Bedroom ApartmentsLong Island City, Queens

One-Bedroom Apartments in Long Island City, Queens (2026)

One-bedroom apartments are the most-searched NYC rental category, typically running $2,400-$4,500/month depending on neighborhood. They offer the best balance of space, privacy, and cost for solo renters and couples — enough room to host guests without the rent premium of two-bedroom units. In Long Island City specifically, the neighborhood scores well on livability — with 6 subway stations nearby.

Long Island City at a glance

Livability
7.4/10
Median price
Subway stations
6
Borough rank
#1/27

Long Island City scores 7.4 median: exceptional for commuting and practical services, held back by noise, rising crime, and modest financial indicators.

What to look for in a one-bedroom apartment in Long Island City

Long Island City has a specific housing profile that affects your one-bedroom search. The practical infrastructure is strong, and the building stock includes budget-friendly options. These are the considerations that matter most here:

  • True 1BR vs. junior 1BR (junior 1BRs are studios with a door, not true bedrooms)
  • Bedroom window: NYC law requires at least one window in every legal bedroom
  • Living room dimensions (some NYC 1BRs have tiny living rooms relative to bedroom)
  • Closet count and configuration
  • Storage beyond closets (under-bed, pantry, outdoor storage)

How to verify a one-bedroom listing

Listings often over-promise on amenities. Before you sign a lease for a claimed one-bedroom apartment in Long Island City, run through this verification checklist:

  • Verify the bedroom has a proper window and closet (required by NYC law)
  • Measure bedroom dimensions — some listings exaggerate
  • Check if the bedroom is on an interior wall or faces outside
  • Test whether a queen-size bed actually fits with normal circulation space
  • Ask about noise transmission between bedroom and living room

Want a deeper dive? Read our full How to Find an Apartment in NYC guide.

About Long Island City, Queens

Long Island City is a rapidly densifying waterfront neighborhood defined by glass high-rises, active street life, and surprisingly robust tree cover. You'll find an average of 64 trees within a 200-meter radius with a canopy density of 9.5/10—comparable to quieter residential Queens neighborhoods. The built environment is 51% high-rise, 30% mid-rise, and 19% walk-up, creating a visibly vertical skyline with Manhattan views. Street-level, you're navigating constant construction, heavy foot traffic, and a mix of industrial remnants alongside new development. Parks are accessible but modest: Murray Playground, Andrews Grove, Court Square Park, and Notorious LIC Park cluster within an average of 263 meters, though noise complaints (2,524 in 12 months) reflect the reality of a high-activity commercial and residential zone.

Long Island City scores 7.4/10 overall on DwellCheck's livability index, ranking #1 of 27 in Queens. Rent prices in Long Island City vary widely; check specific listings for current market rates. Long Island City has 6 subway stations within walking distance: Queens Plaza, Court Sq-23 St, 21 St.

Long Island City averages 64 trees within 200m of each address, with a canopy density score of 9.5/10. Nearest major parks: Murray Playground, Andrews Grove, Court Square Park (avg 263m away).

Who Long Island City is best for

Commuters prioritizing transit access

Commute score of 9.5 is among the highest in the city, with six subway lines (E, F, R, 7, G, M, N, W) within walking distance via Queens Plaza, Court Square, and Queensboro Plaza stations

Practical urban dwellers

Practical score of 9.0 reflects dense commercial infrastructure, services, and walkability typical of a fully developed neighborhood with 276 tracked buildings

Art and culture seekers

ART/Livability score of 6.3 exceeds borough median (4.8) thanks to MoMA PS1 and emerging cultural infrastructure, though the neighborhood remains more commercial than cultural

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I know about finding a one-bedroom place in Long Island City?

Long Island City pricing varies by block and building. Long Island City ranks #1/27 in Queens on livability (7.4/10). Known for manhattan views and waterfront parks, Long Island City has a rental market where one-bedroom options depend heavily on building era and management. Long Island City scores 7.4 median: exceptional for commuting and practical services, held back by noise, rising crime, and modest financial indicators.

How much should I expect to pay in Long Island City?

Pricing in Long Island City varies widely by block, building age, and floor. Queens is a large borough with significant rent variation — always compare at least 3-4 listings before committing.

Is Long Island City actually a good fit for someone looking for a one-bedroom apartment?

Depends on your priorities. Long Island City scores 9/10 on practical livability and 9.5/10 on commute access. It tends to work best for commuters prioritizing transit access. The one-bedroom inventory specifically depends on building stock, which you can verify address by address.

How do I get around from Long Island City?

You have 6 subway stations within walking distance. The closest are Queens Plaza (E/F/R) and Court Sq-23 St (7/E/F/G/M). Transit access here is strong.

What about safety in Long Island City?

Block-by-block variation is significant — two addresses a quarter mile apart can have very different safety profiles. Queens averages 180 reported incidents per 300m radius and 1.5 shooting incidents per 500m. The only way to know for a specific address is to check the NYPD data within a walking radius.

Are there parks or green space near Long Island City?

Long Island City averages 64 trees within 200m of each address, with Murray Playground about 263m away. The outdoor score is 5.3/10. There is some green space, though it is not the area's strongest feature.

What ZIP code covers Long Island City?

Long Island City falls in 11101 (Long Island City).

Check a specific Long Island City address

Neighborhood averages are a starting point. Every NYC apartment building has unique violations, complaint history, and livability characteristics. Enter any address for a block-level analysis.

Check a Long Island City address →