New York has some of the strongest renter protections in the country, built on two big laws: the Housing Stability and Tenant Protection Act of 2019 (HSTPA), which set statewide rules on deposits, fees, and eviction notices, and the Good Cause Eviction law of 2024, which limits no-reason evictions and large rent hikes in New York City and any locality that opts in. Lawful source of income — including Housing Choice Vouchers and ERAP — is a protected class statewide. The state housing agency is NYS Homes and Community Renewal (HCR), while NYCHA and local authorities run the vouchers. This page covers the statewide framework; for New York City’s rent-stabilization system, NYCHA, and city-funded vouchers, see our New York City guide.

Quick numbers to write down:

Public Housing & Vouchers in New York

Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers and public housing are run by local authorities — the New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA) is the largest in the country, and there are dozens of others (Buffalo, Rochester, Yonkers, Albany, Syracuse, and more). The state also runs a HCR Section 8 program covering many counties without a local administrator. HCR oversees rent regulation, state-financed affordable housing, and the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit — search HUD’s LIHTC database or read how to find LIHTC housing.

Apply to several authorities at once — you are not limited to your home city. Use HUD’s PHA directory or our how to find your PHA and how to apply for Section 8 guides. For NYCHA, the NYC voucher waitlists, and city programs, see the New York City guide.

Good Cause Eviction (2024)

New York’s Good Cause Eviction law took effect April 20, 2024. It applies automatically in New York City, and gives every other city, town, and village the option to opt in through its local legislature. Where it applies, a landlord generally needs a legitimate reason (“good cause”) to evict or to refuse to renew a lease, and a tenant cannot be evicted for nonpayment of an unreasonable rent increase.

Check whether your municipality has opted in — the NY Attorney General’s Good Cause guide and HCR keep current lists.

HSTPA: Statewide Tenant Protections (2019)

The 2019 Housing Stability and Tenant Protection Act extended protections that once applied only to regulated apartments to all New York tenants:

Emergency Rental Assistance in New York

New York’s statewide Emergency Rental Assistance Program (ERAP) is no longer taking general applications — the funds are largely exhausted. Importantly, ERAP is still a protected lawful source of income, so a landlord cannot refuse it. Current help:

NYC residents have additional city programs (CityFHEPS, FHEPS, one-shot deals through HRA) — see the New York City guide. For the national picture, read our emergency rental assistance guide.

New York Tenant Law: Key Protections at a Glance

Quick Reference: New York (NY)

Source-of-income protection

Since 2019, lawful source of income has been a protected class statewide under the New York Human Rights Law (Executive Law 296(5)). A landlord, broker, or owner cannot refuse you, charge you more, or advertise “no programs” because you would pay with a Section 8 voucher, CityFHEPS, SSI/SSDI, public assistance, or ERAP. File a complaint with the NYS Division of Human Rights (1-888-392-3644); in New York City you can also file with the NYC Commission on Human Rights. Read our source-of-income protections guide.

Security deposits

Under General Obligations Law 7-108, a deposit cannot exceed one month’s rent. You have the right to a walk-through inspection before move-out, and the landlord must return the deposit within 14 days of your moving out along with an itemized statement of any deductions — if they miss the deadline, they may forfeit the right to keep any of it. See how to recover your security deposit.

Eviction process & how long it takes

New York eviction cases run through Article 7 of the RPAPL, and self-help eviction is a crime (RPAPL 768) — a landlord cannot change your locks, remove your belongings, or shut off utilities, even after a judgment. The sequence is:

Because of the 14-day demand, court backlogs, and the post-warrant notice, a New York eviction commonly takes two to four months or longer, and far longer if contested. Do not move out on your own — you have the right to be heard. Find a lawyer through LawHelpNY and read how to avoid eviction.

Major New York Cities We Cover

Our city guide has local authority waitlists, named rental-assistance programs, and shelter contacts:

Where to Get Help in New York

Free legal aid: LawHelpNY connects renters to local legal-aid offices; many tenants qualify for a free eviction-defense lawyer.

Source-of-income / discrimination: the NYS Division of Human Rights (1-888-392-3644) enforces the Human Rights Law, including voucher refusals.

State housing agency: NYS Homes and Community Renewal for rent regulation, programs, and the Good Cause list.

Emergency assistance & HEAP: OTDA and your local Department of Social Services.

211 helpline: dial 2-1-1 or visit 211.org for rental help, shelters, and utility assistance.

HUD fair housing: file at hud.gov/reporthousingdiscrimination or call 1-800-669-9777.

Next Steps

Not sure where to begin? Our Where to Start tool routes you to the right mix of New York programs in about two minutes based on whether your need is an emergency or long-term.

If you have a rent demand or court papers, do not wait: find a legal-aid lawyer through LawHelpNY and read eviction prevention. Many New York tenants qualify for free representation in housing court.