New York rent increase notice calculator.
Enter the current rent, new rent, and effective date. Get the required notice period, rent-cap compliance check, and whether your effective date is legal. Built from RPL 226-c (HSTPA 2019) and Good Cause Eviction, Part HH of 2024 State Budget.
Generate the New York rent increase notice, signature-ready, $29.
The calculator above gave you the notice period. The template below puts it on a New York-specific notice with the statutory wording, your tenant's name, the new rent, and the effective date filled in. Audited line by line against RPL 226-c (HSTPA 2019).
Get the New Yorkrent increase template, $29 →The statutes behind this calculator.
New York uses a tenure-based notice ladder at RPL 226-c: 30 days for tenancies under 1 year, 60 days for 1-2 years, 90 days for 2+ years. Only triggers if the increase exceeds 5% or the landlord does not renew. Good Cause Eviction (Part HH 2024) caps increases at CPI + 5% or 10% max in NYC and opt-in municipalities, with exemptions for small owner-occupied buildings and new construction.
- ·Tenure-based notice: <1 year = 30 days, 1-2 years = 60 days, 2+ years = 90 days
- ·226-c only triggers when the new rent is more than 5% above current rent or the landlord does not renew
- ·Good Cause Eviction mandatory per-lease notice form took effect August 18, 2024
- ·NYC has additional rent stabilization rules that supersede the Good Cause cap where applicable
- ·Owner-occupied buildings of 10 units or fewer
- ·Buildings with certificate of occupancy issued within the last 30 years (rolling)
- ·Rent-stabilized units (covered by separate stabilization law)
- ·Condos and co-ops
- ·Subsidized housing
- ·High-rent market-rate units above 245% of fair market rent
What this calculator is, and what it is not.
This calculator applies the New York rules as of early 2026. It is not legal advice. Housing law changes year to year and local ordinances (especially in rent-controlled cities) can apply stricter rules. For contested cases, consult a New York-licensed attorney.
Source: https://leasekit.io/new-york-rent-increase-calculator. Built by a small team of legal researchers and developers.