Licensed New York real estate broker. Residential, commercial, and investment — all five boroughs.
Lee Eliyahu has been brokering real estate in New York since 2014 — residential sales and rentals, commercial leasing and sales, and investment transactions across all five boroughs. The practice runs across Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx, and Staten Island.
Before specializing in real estate, Lee worked across financial services and banking, which informs how he approaches investment deals and capital-heavy transactions. That background means clients working on acquisitions, hard-money financing, or merchant processing get someone who understands numbers, not just listings.
The practice is affiliated with Bridge Advisory Group. Lee works in English, Hebrew, and Spanish.
Closings, contract review, title disputes, and lease negotiations handled by experienced NY real estate counsel.
Conventional mortgage brokers and hard-money sources for investment acquisitions that need to move fast.
Licensed contractors and property inspectors who can walk a building before an offer goes in.
Full-service property managers for owners who close the deal and need operations handled from day one.
Trusted title companies and escrow officers who keep closings clean and on schedule.
Merchant processing and business funding partners for operators who need capital alongside real estate.
Residential, commercial, and investment transactions closed since 2014.
Units leased and sold, from Financial District studios to multi-family in Bay Ridge.
Because a broker who only knows Manhattan isn't really a New York broker.
Lee found us an off-market two-bedroom in the West Village that was never hitting the MLS. He walked the building with our contractor before we'd even made an offer.
We were signing a retail lease in SoHo. His advice on the TI package and the escalation clause saved us six figures over the term.
Gain expert insights, understand your property's potential and make informed decisions.
Get Your Opinion of ValuePricing an apartment, walking a lease, sizing a bridge loan — the first conversation is a conversation, nothing more.