Real Estate

Rent is way too high — even for Uma Thurman’s brother

Bed-Stuy real estate is so hot, even Uma Thurman’s brother can’t afford to live there.

Mipam Thurman spent two years hunting for a home in the “Do The Right Thing” nabe but had to settle for a spread in East Flatbush when Bedford-Stuyvesant’s $1-million-plus price tags gave him sticker shock.

“Unfortunately, I was outbid and lost a lot of deals,” Thurman said. “By the time I figured it out, I had been priced out of what I wanted.”

Thurman — who settled for a $549,000 two-family home in the Brooklyn hinterlands — is just one of many flocking further east, even to places like East New York.

“They are going further east on the L train to get the homes they want,” said Ban Leow, a Halstead Property broker. He says New Yorkers like Thurman will continue to take the L train as far east as they have to go in order to get what they want.

“The coffee shops, boutiques and clubs will follow,” he said.