After nearly a year on the market and no takers for sale, Savannah Guthrie has instead rented out her downtown Manhattan residence, The Post has learned.
The “Today” anchor host initially listed her four-bedroom, four-bathroom Tribeca apartment back in January for $7.1 million.
Eight months later, in September, the 3,735-square-foot home received a $600,000 price cut to $6.5 million.
But with the New York City real estate scene being dubbed a renters’ market amid languishing high interest rates, Guthrie, 51, and husband, Michael Feldman, decided to put the apartment up for rent one month later, in October.
The unit rented a few weeks ago. While it was listed at $30,000, the final rental price is unknown.
Cortnee Glasser of Sotheby’s International Realty held the listing.
Guthrie, and her former democratic advisor husband, purchased the home in 2017 for roughly $7.11 million — meaning they were already willing to accept an approximate $14,000 loss if the home traded hands at their initial asking price, plus the cost for renovations over the years.
This was the first home they had purchased together following their wedding in 2014.
“I’ve never been one to like those humongous buildings where you walk in and you feel like you could be at a hotel,” Guthrie previously told the Wall Street Journal. “This is a small, sweet building.”
The full-floor loft features 10-foot ceilings, and a custom marble and white oak bar.
The open chef’s kitchen is outfitted with extensive floor-to-ceiling cabinetry, a honed black Saint Laurent marble center island and a full suite of Gaggenau appliances — including a wine refrigerator and a vented range hood, the listing says.
The primary suite boasts a fireplace and a dressing room. The bathroom comes with Carrera marble and bluestone finishes, a deep soaking tub beneath a flat-screen television and a separate shower.
The building has a 24-hour doorman, a full-time super, a state-of-the-art fitness room and a bike room.
“My fingernails will be scraping against the glass leaving this apartment,” Guthrie said at the time.
In exchange for giving up their place in downtown Manhattan, Guthrie and her family now split their time between Brooklyn and their upstate New York home in the Hudson Valley.