Real Estate

7 Of The Most Expensive Zip Codes In Nation Are On Long Island

No surprise here. One LI zip code is the second most expensive in the entire country. Can you guess which one?

This 6-bed, 6.5-bath Sagaponack home is on the market for $9,995,000.
This 6-bed, 6.5-bath Sagaponack home is on the market for $9,995,000. (Realtor.com)

Seven Long Island zip codes are among the 125 most expensive in the United States, a new study shows.

Four Suffolk County zip codes and three in Nassau County topped PropertyShark's list of regions where buying a home costs the most, which the real estate website released this week.

Sagaponack, a village in the Town of Southampton, came in at No. 2 on the list with a median home price of $4.3 million. Jimmy Fallon is among the rich and famous who call Sagaponack home.

Find out what's happening in Southamptonwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

California dominated the 125-code list with 91 zip codes— Atherton took first with a $7 million median sale price — but New York State came in second for pricy zips with 18 high-price regions, the study shows.

All New York State's high-priced zips clustered in or near New York city with 10 codes in Manhattan and Brooklyn, seven on Long Island and one in Westchester. All of the Suffolk County zip codes on the list are on the East End.

Find out what's happening in Southamptonwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Here are Long Island's priciest:

2) 11962 (Sagaponack) at $4.3 million

8) 11932 (Bridgehampton) at $2.55 million

18) 11765 (Mill Neck) at $2.09 million

35) 11936 (Water Mill) at $2,520,000

43) 11930 (Amagansett) at $1.94 million

81) 11568 (Old Westbury) at $1.53 million

92) 10012 (Manhasset) at $1.47 million

Two New York City zip codes — TriBeCa's 10007 and Hudson Square's 10013 — made the top 10 list with $3.9 million and $3.52 million median sales prices, respectively.

Brooklyn broke into the top 100 for the first time with a $1.45 million median sales price in the Red Hook and Carroll Gardens zip code, the study shows.

PropertyShark analysts looked at sale prices of condo, co-ops, houses, and two-family buildings across the nation between Jan. 1 and Nov. 5 to determine which zip codes were priciest.

Read more about the nationwide findings and methodology on PropertyShark.com.


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