New York rent increase rules
There is no statewide cap. Rent-stabilized units (mainly New York City and some counties) follow board-set annual rates.
Depends on your city
New York has no statewide cap. Any limit is set locally by your municipality or rent board, so check your city's rules.
30 days written notice, one increase per 12 months. Earliest effective date if you gave notice today: August 7, 2026.
This is a general estimate, not legal advice. Rules change and local ordinances can differ. Always confirm with the official source before giving notice: NY rent regulation (HCR).
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Get started freeKey rules in New York
- Notice required
- 30 days
- Between increases
- 12 months
- Yearly cap
- Local
Common exemptions
- Only rent-stabilized or rent-controlled units
- Increase notice grows to 60 or 90 days for longer tenancies
Common questions about New York
How much can a landlord raise the rent in New York?
New York has no statewide cap. Any limit is set locally by your city or rent board, so it depends on where the unit is. A landlord must still give 30 days written notice, and can raise the rent once every 12 months.
How much notice is required to raise rent in New York?
A landlord in New York must give 30 days written notice before a rent increase, and cannot raise the rent more than once every 12 months. This is a general guide, not legal advice.
Rent increase rules nearby
General estimate, not legal advice. Last reviewed July 8, 2026. Confirm the current figure with the official source: NY rent regulation (HCR).