
Last year, a wave of headlines drew attention to the rising cost of permanent parking in Downtown Boston when a parking space at the Brimmer Street Garage was listed for $750,000. That price, the high end of luxury parking spaces, drew attention as an outlier, but what once felt extreme for parking pricing has increasingly become normalized.
Rene
Rodriguez, senior vice president at the Cabot & Company real estate
firm and the agent who eventually sold the Brimmer Street spot for
$600,000, says set a record at that garage.
Just
hours before being interviewed for this story, Rodriguez closed on an
off-market parking sale at 74 Commonwealth Avenue for $425,000. He said
he’s been working in the market for 28 years and recent years have seen
the market for deeded spaces in areas like Back Bay, Beacon Hill and the
South End steadily tighten.
That recent sale, he said, reflects how many high end parking deals now happen quietly without ever being publicly listed.
“The
way those spaces normally work is the attendants in the garage keep a
list of people who are interested in purchasing parking there, and when a
seller says that they want to sell their space, they call the next
person on the list,” Rodriguez said. “They’re not necessarily priced to
market, and they’re not exposed to market forces.”
It’s
difficult to determine what might be considered a “market rate” for
permanent parking for those in the market to buy. Two years ago, The Boston Guardian reported
the sale of permanent spaces downtown ranging from $150,000 to $500,000
and that range remains broadly true, while it becomes more common for
sales to creep up to and over that top end.
“Wilkes
Passage Condominiums, in the South End, has a garage attached and
you’re allowed to sell the spaces separate from the condominiums
upstairs. However, they can only be sold to South End residents,”
Rodriguez said. “Just seven or eight years ago, those spaces were
trading for $50,000 to $80,000, and now the minimum purchase price is
$150,000. It’s easy to sell, but those prices have gone up
considerably.”
Many
deeded spaces are sold with the purchase of a condo, so they can be hard
to value, but Rodriguez said that’s often a deal-breaker on the sale of
the property.
“In
Beacon Hill, most of the houses do not have parking. You’re starting to
find townhouses there priced from $10 million to $50 million and up, and
at that point, people demand parking,” Rodriguez said. “It’s
convenient, but at that point it’s also an investment because you could
be sitting on a $15 million house and they’re going to pass it over
because it doesn’t have parking.”
Still,
he cautioned that these spaces are not easy investments. “You can’t
finance them. You need to find cash buyers for them,” he said. “It has
to have its own plot plan, a separate tax bill to be able to sell it.”
While
the city had not returned a request for comment as of the date of this
publication, Rodriguez said that city policies like the Downtown Parking
Freeze have little to no effect on the sale prices of permanent parking
spaces.
Under rules
dating back to the 1970s and administered by the Air Pollution Control
Commission, the freeze caps the number of off-street commercial parking
spaces in the downtown area at 35,556, with 4,188 spaces available, as
of July 17, 2025, that developers or property owners can allocate for
new or expanded parking facilities. This reflects only a slight change
from the 4,869 spaces available when The Boston Guardian reported this story in 2024.
Residential
parking remains exempt from the commercial space cap, but anyone
planning new shared or public commercial spaces downtown must navigate
the permit process and the limited supply of freeze bank spaces.