In Moscow’s mass-market new-build sector, the tallest apartment among those units sits in Pechatniki, a southeast district. The property is a two-storey residence perched on the 68th and 69th floors, listed at 28.7 million rubles for a 64 square meter layout. This data comes from a Metrium market study and is reported by Socialbites. The research maps how height, price, and unit size interact across new high-rise projects rising in the capital. It highlights homes with city views and top-tier towers, offering a data-driven snapshot of the mass-market segment’s higher end where skyline panoramas attract buyers seeking value and spectacle in one package.
In the business-class tier, the priciest option is found in Konkovo, a southwest district where a complex rises to floors 57 and 58. The 74 square meter residence carries a price of 45.8 million rubles. This example illustrates how business-class towers deliver larger layouts, refined finishes, and quieter living environments while remaining within reach of buyers who want more space without stepping into the ultra-premium tier.
Industry observers note that business class remains the most active segment in Moscow’s tall-building development. The market commentary points to strong demand for better materials, modern layouts, and convenient access to city centers that make these towers especially appealing to professional buyers and investors alike.
From the same pool of insights, the share of skyscraper projects in Moscow’s primary market that fall within the business-class category is reported to exceed 40 percent. This signals sustained appetite for height paired with practical living standards and reliable returns for developers and buyers.
In the premium segment the spotlight stays on a central Moscow City skyscraper on the 77th floor. A four-room apartment of about 161 square meters is on the market for roughly 135.1 million rubles, a price reflecting location, space, and premium amenities in a disciplined urban core.
Today, the eighth skyscraper taller than 300 meters is under construction in Moscow, meeting the international CTBUH height classification. All of these towers are located within the Moscow City business cluster and are categorized as premium properties.
The October study by Metrium analyzed the market for view-rich apartments in new tall buildings across Moscow. The research included projects exceeding 30 floors, or 100 meters in height, across multiple segments, and it identified the highest flats within each project that still offered the lowest price for that height.
Taken together, the findings sketch a clear arc in Moscow’s high-rise market: mass-market towers deliver affordable city views, business-class projects combine space with comfort and efficiency, and premium towers command the skyline with generous layouts and top-end amenities that attract buyers from across the region and even international investors.