New York Landlord Maintenance Obligations & Warranty of Habitability
Understand the implied warranty of habitability in New York, landlord repair timelines, tenant remedies, and NYC Housing Court HP Actions.
Legal Disclaimer
This content is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Laws change frequently — always verify current regulations and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation. Landager is a property management platform, not a law firm.
New York's implied warranty of habitability is one of the strongest tenant protections in the United States. It is automatically part of every residential lease—written or oral—and cannot be waived by the tenant under any circumstances.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. NYC-specific rules apply in addition to state law. Always consult a licensed attorney in New York for guidance specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.
The Implied Warranty of Habitability
Under NY Real Property Law § 235-b, every residential landlord in New York warrants that the premises are fit for human habitation, safe, and in good repair. This is a non-waivable statutory right.
What the Warranty Covers
The landlord must ensure:
- The building structure is sound and safe.
- Plumbing, heating, electrical, and ventilating systems are in good and safe working order.
- Appliances supplied by the landlord (stoves, refrigerators) are operable.
- Common areas (hallways, lobbies, stairwells) are clean, lit, and free of hazards.
- The premises are free from vermin, rodent, and pest infestations.
- The building has adequate heat and hot water.
- Smoke and carbon monoxide detectors are installed and functional.
NYC-Specific Repair Timelines
The NYC Housing Maintenance Code (HMC) classifies violations by severity and establishes strict repair timelines:
| Violation Class | Examples | Repair Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Class C — Immediately Hazardous | No heat, no hot water, gas leak, broken oven, lead paint (child under 6) | 24 hours |
| Class B — Hazardous | Leaking ceiling, roach/mouse infestation, broken window, peeling paint | 30 days |
| Class A — Non-Hazardous | Minor peeling paint (no child), cracked wall plaster, missing smoke detector battery | 90 days |
Tenant Remedies
If a landlord fails to meet their maintenance obligations, New York tenants have powerful remedies:
1. Call 311 / File an HPD Complaint (NYC)
In NYC, tenants can call 311 to report conditions. The Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) will inspect and issue violations to the landlord, which carry fines and enforcement actions.
2. HP Action in Housing Court (NYC)
Tenants can file an HP Action (Housing Part Action) in Housing Court to compel the landlord to make repairs. The court can order the landlord to correct violations, and failure to comply can result in contempt of court and daily fines.
3. Rent Abatement
Tenants can sue for a rent reduction (rent abatement) proportional to the diminished value of the apartment. Courts routinely award 10-50% rent reductions for persistent habitability violations.
4. Repair and Deduct
In limited circumstances, tenants may make necessary repairs and deduct the reasonable cost from rent. This is most defensible when the landlord was notified, failed to act, and the condition is dangerous.
5. Constructive Eviction
If conditions render the apartment completely uninhabitable (e.g., total loss of heat in winter, severe flooding), the tenant may treat the lease as terminated after providing three days' written notice under RPL § 227-a.
Landlord Best Practices
- Respond immediately to Class C conditions: A 24-hour window leaves virtually no room for delay. Have emergency maintenance contractors on call.
- Document everything: Keep a log of all maintenance requests, responses, and completion dates. Timestamped digital records are essential.
- Conduct annual inspections: Proactively identify issues before they become violations. In NYC, annual inspections for lead paint (where applicable) and mold are mandatory.
- Never cut services: Reducing or eliminating heat, hot water, or other essential services, even temporarily as a cost-saving measure, is an immediate warranty violation and can constitute harassment.
How Landager Helps
In New York—especially NYC—a single unresolved HPD violation can snowball into fines, HP Actions, and rent abatements that devastate your cash flow. Landager's maintenance management system lets tenants submit requests directly through the app, automatically categorizes issues by severity, assigns them to your vendor network, and maintains a timestamped, court-ready repair log. You can track open violations, monitor repair deadlines, and ensure nothing slips through the cracks.
Sources & Official References
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