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Gerritsen Beach Real Estate

Gerritsen Beach Real Estate

Complete seclusion - that is the only way to describe Gerritsen Beach Real Estate. This is the place to live if your truly cherish peace and quiet. 1,850 homes line its charming side streets, creating a seaside village like something out of a movie. Not to say it hasn't been in a few. Gerritsen Beach has provided the backdrop for a couple movies including She's the One, The Departed and Shaft.

Gerritsen Beach was struck hard by Hurricane Sandy in 2012. Some 90% of homes received varying degrees of flood damage calling for millions of dollars in repairs. However, Gerritsen Beach is a truly close community - and it shows. For the past three years, residents and Good Samaritans have quickly helped the quaint little town rebuild. Residents have brought in experts from all over Brooklyn, New York and America to stabilize homes and their foundations to conditions stronger than they were before.

Gerritsen Beach - Community

Gerritsen Beach Real Estate is a neighborhood with a strong Irish-Catholic community with many long-standing residents referring to the community as cois farraige - Irish for "by the sea." Activities in the area are leisurely with a few sports fields to serve athletes and parks for strolling. Fishing is a popular pastime with anglers found fishing along shores and in its marshes. Unique to Gerritsen Beach is the Gerritsen Marine Park Salt Marsh.

Gerritsen Beach - Transportation

Getting to and from Gerritsen Beach via public transportation can be a little bit of a hassle if used as the sole means of transportation. No subway lines serve the area with the closest stations adjacent in Sheepshead Bay. However, bus lines do serve the area via its main road on Gerritsen Avenue. Luckily, Gerritsen Beach Real Estate is some of the only homes in Brooklyn to have driveways, street parking and ample parking spots for car owners.

Whether you are buying or selling a home in Gerritsen Beach, the knowledgeable team at Madison Estates Sotheby's® - The Franzese Group can help you. Please call one of our Gerritsen Beach Real Estate Agents today at (718) 666-2696 or fill out our contact form on this page.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to renovate my Gerritsen Beach home before selling?

Buyers care about flood-stabilization status post-Sandy. Document any foundation work, elevation, or flood-mitigation improvements. Cosmetic refresh helps too. Call The Franzese Group at (718) 666-2696 before any project.

How do I prepare my Gerritsen Beach home for showings?

Showcase the seaside village character and any post-Sandy improvements. Deep clean, declutter, depersonalize. The Franzese Group provides a pre-listing checklist with every Gerritsen Beach listing. Call (718) 666-2696.

How long does it take to sell a home in Gerritsen Beach?

Gerritsen Beach has a specific buyer pool - people seeking the seaside village isolation and tight-knit community. Well-priced listings typically go under contract within 45 to 90 days. Call The Franzese Group at (718) 666-2696.

How long is the commute from Gerritsen Beach to Manhattan?

Gerritsen Beach has no direct subway service - the closest stations are in adjacent Sheepshead Bay. Bus lines serve the neighborhood via Gerritsen Avenue. Most residents drive. Gerritsen Beach is one of the few Brooklyn neighborhoods where homes have driveways, street parking, and ample parking - rare for the borough.

Is Gerritsen Beach a good place to live?

Gerritsen Beach appeals to buyers who want a close-knit, small-town community with a waterfront setting inside the city. It offers small, affordable detached and semi-detached homes, many with deep local roots, a strong sense of community and tradition, and access to the water and nearby Marine Park. Its isolation and lack of subway mean a longer, bus-dependent commute, and much of it lies in a flood zone, but for buyers drawn to its village-like character and community, Gerritsen Beach is unlike anywhere else in Brooklyn.

Is Gerritsen Beach in a flood zone?

Yes, much of Gerritsen Beach lies in a flood zone due to its low-lying, water-surrounded location, and the neighborhood was among the hardest hit in Brooklyn by Hurricane Sandy in 2012, when many of its small homes flooded. Since then, resiliency efforts and updated building and elevation standards have been introduced, and rebuilding has raised many homes. Buyers should factor flood-zone status into insurance costs and review a specific property's elevation and protections, but the neighborhood's tight community has remained committed to its waterfront home.

Is Gerritsen Beach safe?

Gerritsen Beach is widely considered one of the safer, most tight-knit neighborhoods in Brooklyn. A small, isolated waterfront community in the southeastern part of the borough, it has low crime and a strong, close-knit, family-oriented character, with generations of families who have long called it home. As with any neighborhood, common-sense awareness is sensible, but Gerritsen Beach is regarded as one of the more secure and community-minded places to live in Brooklyn.

Should I sell my Gerritsen Beach home now or wait?

Gerritsen Beach's tight 1,850-home inventory and tight community keep the market stable. Post-Sandy rebuilds have raised the quality bar across the neighborhood. Call The Franzese Group at (718) 666-2696.

What does it cost to sell a home in Gerritsen Beach?

Selling costs include commission (5-6%), NY State transfer tax (0.4%), NYC transfer tax (1-1.425%), attorney fees ($1,500-$3,500), and any buyer credits. The Franzese Group provides a complete net sheet up front. Call (718) 666-2696.

What is Gerritsen Beach known for?

Gerritsen Beach is known for complete seclusion - 1,850 homes lining charming side streets create a seaside village like something out of a movie (literally, it's been the backdrop for She's the One, The Departed, and Shaft). The neighborhood has a strong Irish-Catholic community with long-standing residents calling it "cois farraige" (Irish for "by the sea"). Activities are leisurely - fishing along shores and marshes, sports fields, parks. The unique Gerritsen Marine Park Salt Marsh sits within the neighborhood. Hurricane Sandy hit hard in 2012 with 90% of homes flooded, but the tight community rebuilt stronger. To explore Gerritsen Beach real estate, call (718) 666-2696.

What is my Gerritsen Beach home worth?

Gerritsen Beach pricing reflects the unique seaside-village character and tight inventory (only 1,850 homes total). Your value depends on lot size, condition (post-Sandy stabilization matters - homes rebuilt to stronger standards command premiums), and proximity to the water and the salt marsh. For a free valuation, call The Franzese Group at (718) 666-2696. View current inventory on our Gerritsen Beach real estate page.

What kind of housing is available in Gerritsen Beach?

Gerritsen Beach has only 1,850 homes total - a tight, well-defined inventory of seaside-village single-family houses. Many have been rebuilt or strengthened post-Sandy. Driveways and parking are common, which is unusual for Brooklyn. To browse Gerritsen Beach listings, call (718) 666-2696.

What makes the Gerritsen Beach community special?

Gerritsen Beach is described as "cois farraige" - Irish for "by the sea" - by long-standing residents, reflecting the strong Irish-Catholic community ties. When Hurricane Sandy hit in 2012 and 90% of homes flooded, the community rebuilt itself with help from residents and Good Samaritans bringing experts from all over Brooklyn and beyond. That kind of community response speaks to neighborhood character. For buyers prioritizing genuine community and seaside privacy, Gerritsen Beach is one of NYC's only options. Call The Franzese Group at (718) 666-2696.

Where is Gerritsen Beach and what is it like?

Gerritsen Beach is a small, secluded neighborhood on a peninsula in southeastern Brooklyn, bordered by Marine Park and Sheepshead Bay and surrounded by water on several sides. It has a distinctive, town-like character, with narrow streets of small, closely spaced homes, many originating as early-1900s summer bungalows, and a deep-rooted, historically Irish-American community. With no subway and reliance on buses and cars, it feels like a village apart from the rest of the city, prized by residents for its tight community and waterfront setting.