Three-Bedroom ApartmentsBrooklyn

Three-Bedroom Apartments in Park Slope, Brooklyn (2026)

NYC three-bedroom apartments are the rarest of the standard categories — typically family-sized units in brownstone conversions or pre-war buildings. Expect $5,000-$12,000/month depending on neighborhood. The biggest challenge is finding a true 3BR (not a 2BR plus home office), because many listings inflate bedroom counts to justify higher rents.

Park Slope at a glance

Livability
5.5/10
Median price
$1.4M
Subway stations
8
Borough rank
#7/11

Park Slope delivers strong livability and transit for those who can afford the $1.45M median entry point, but financial and investment metrics suggest you're paying for established character rather than appreciation potential.

What to look for in a three-bedroom apartment in Park Slope

Three-Bedroom Apartments come with specific considerations that vary by building and neighborhood. In Park Slope specifically, these are the factors that matter most:

  • True 3BR vs 2BR-plus-office: each bedroom must have a legal window and closet
  • Square footage per bedroom (NYC minimum is 80 sqft)
  • Shared vs separate bathroom count (3BRs with one bathroom are common in pre-war)
  • Layout flow — railroad 3BRs require walking through bedrooms
  • Family-appropriate neighborhood (schools, parks, quiet streets)

How to verify a three-bedroom listing

Listings often over-promise on amenities. Before you sign a lease for a claimed three-bedroom apartment in Park Slope, run through this verification checklist:

  • Verify all three bedrooms meet the NYC legal minimum (80 sqft, window, closet)
  • Check that none of the bedrooms are actually flex walls or temporary partitions
  • Count bathrooms — three beds with one bath is a hard quality-of-life problem
  • Measure each room; "3BR" listings often conceal a tiny third room
  • Confirm the third bedroom has outside window egress (required by code)

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

About Park Slope, Brooklyn

You'll walk tree-lined streets with an average of 232 trees within 200 meters and a canopy density of 7.5/10—the neighborhood has the visible green infrastructure to back its park-adjacent reputation. Prospect Park sits nearby, along with Green-Wood Cemetery and Fort Greene Park (all within roughly 1,375 meters on average), giving you genuine outdoor access rather than proximity claims. The building stock is predominantly condo (88%), with brownstones and townhouses filling out the remainder, creating a residential texture that feels established rather than transitional. You're also well-served by transit: the R line at Union Street, the 2/3 at Bergen Street, the B/Q/F/G at 7th Avenue, and access to Atlantic Avenue–Barclays Center for the full network.

Park Slope scores 5.5/10 overall on DwellCheck's livability index, ranking #7 of 11 in Brooklyn. The median listing price in Park Slope is $1.4M at $1362/sqft. Park Slope has 8 subway stations within walking distance: Union St, Bergen St, 7 Av.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are three-bedroom apartments common in Park Slope?

Three-Bedroom Apartments availability in Park Slope varies by building type, era, and individual landlord policies. Park Slope scores 5.5/10 overall on DwellCheck's livability index, ranking #7 of 11 in Brooklyn. Use DwellCheck to filter specific addresses by your criteria.

How much do three-bedroom apartments cost in Park Slope?

The median listing price in Park Slope is $1.4M at $1362/sqft. Three-Bedroom Apartments in Park Slope typically carry a small rent premium over comparable non-three-bedroom units. Verify the asking price against neighborhood medians before signing.

How do I find legitimate three-bedroom apartments listings in Park Slope?

Start with StreetEasy, Zillow, and RentHop filtered by your specific criteria. Cross-reference any listing you find on DwellCheck to see the building's HPD violations, 311 complaints, and livability data before you commit.

Is Park Slope a good neighborhood for three-bedroom apartment hunters?

Park Slope scores 5.5/10 overall on DwellCheck's livability index, ranking #7 of 11 in Brooklyn. Park Slope delivers strong livability and transit for those who can afford the $1.45M median entry point, but financial and investment metrics suggest you're paying for established character rather than appreciation potential. Whether Park Slope works for your specific three-bedroom requirements depends on the building, not just the neighborhood. Check individual addresses.

How is transit from Park Slope?

Park Slope has 8 subway stations within walking distance: Union St, Bergen St, 7 Av. Commute times to Midtown and Downtown Manhattan vary by station and line.

Check a specific Park Slope 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 Park Slope address →