MetroDeeds aggregates NYC public records — ACRIS deed transfers, PLUTO ownership, HPD violations, DOB permits — into a single building intelligence surface.
Every deed, every violation, every operator on this BBL is available with a free MetroDeeds account.
Most recent deed
No recorded deed transfers since 2005 — common for buildings held by long-term owners.
NYC Department of Finance publishes annual assessed value, market value, and exemption totals for every BBL. MetroDeeds tracks the full multi-year history from the 8y4t-faws dataset.
Frequently asked questions about 139 CHARLES STREET
Who owns 139 CHARLES STREET?
Sign in to see the registered owner of record for 139 CHARLES STREET. The owner is held under a single-purpose LLC. Free MetroDeeds accounts unlock the owner name plus full deed history; no credit card required.
When was 139 CHARLES STREET last sold?
MetroDeeds shows no confirmed ACRIS deed transfer for 139 CHARLES STREET in the last 5 years. An absence in the 5-year window typically means either the BBL has not transacted recently, or the most recent recorded document is not a DEED type (such as a refinance rather than a sale).
How many HPD violations does 139 CHARLES STREET have?
No open HPD housing-maintenance code violations are on record for 139 CHARLES STREET. The building is not registered with NYC HPD's landlord-registration system, which is typical for owner-occupied 1-2 family dwellings.
What is the assessed value of 139 CHARLES STREET?
Sign in to see the assessed value for 139 CHARLES STREET. MetroDeeds tracks multi-year tax assessment history and surfaces the most recent valuation alongside tax-class context.
What building class is 139 CHARLES STREET and what does that mean?
139 CHARLES STREET is NYC building class K1 — One-story store. A one-story store, typically with residential above. The building class determines the property's tax class and the regulatory regime that applies.
Data Sources
Building facts (year built, units, floors, zoning, lot area, owner of record) are sourced from NYC PLUTO (Department of City Planning). Deed transfers and consideration amounts come from NYC ACRIS (Department of Finance); NYC ACRIS coverage extends back to 1966, so an absence in the 5-year window typically means the BBL has not transacted recently or the most recent recorded document is not a DEED type. Open housing-maintenance violations are pulled daily from the NYC HPD violations feed. Assessed values are published by the NYC Department of Finance; building class is assigned by Finance and recorded in PLUTO. PLUTO ownership reflects the most recent Department of Finance refresh; for buildings transferred within the last 6 months, MetroDeeds prefers the deed grantee as the current owner.