New York Commercial Eviction Process & Yellowstone Injunctions
Learn the commercial eviction procedures in New York, including 14-day rent demands, Yellowstone injunctions, and the prohibition on self-help evictions.
Disclaimer Legale
Questo contenuto è solo a scopo informativo ed educativo generale. Non costituisce consulenza legale e non deve essere considerato tale. Le leggi cambiano frequentemente: verifica sempre le normative vigenti e consulta un avvocato abilitato nella tua giurisdizione per consulenza specifica sulla tua situazione. Landager è una piattaforma di gestione immobiliare, non uno studio legale.Informazioni verificate l'ultima volta: April 2026.
Commercial evictions in New York are among the most procedurally complex in the United States. Even with an airtight lease and clear breach, landlords face a formal court process, potential Yellowstone injunctions, and a complete prohibition on self-help remedies.
Grounds for Eviction
A commercial landlord can initiate eviction proceedings for:
- Non-payment of rent.
- Violation of a material lease term (unauthorized use, failure to maintain insurance, unapproved alterations).
- Holdover (remaining after the lease expires without agreement to extend).
The Eviction Process
New York Commercial Eviction Sequence in new york
Default Notice
Serve the specific notice to cure or quit required by the lease agreement.
Notice of Termination
If the violation isn’t cured, serve the formal notice ending the tenancy.
File Petition
Begin a summary proceeding for non-payment or holdover in the appropriate court.
Judgment and Warrant
Obtain a court order for possession and a warrant for the marshal or sheriff.
Step 1: Pre-Litigation Notices
- Non-Payment: Serve a 14-day written rent demand specifying the amount owed.
- Lease Violations: Serve a notice to cure giving the tenant a specified period to fix the breach (typically 10-30 days depending on the lease's default provisions). If the tenant fails to cure, serve a notice of termination.
- Holdover (No Renewed Lease): Serve a termination notice with the appropriate timeframe.
Step 2: The Yellowstone Injunction
After receiving a notice to cure or notice of termination, the tenant can apply to Supreme Court for a Yellowstone injunction. If granted:
- The court stays (freezes) the cure period, preventing the landlord from terminating the lease.
- The tenant gets additional time to fix the violation.
- The landlord is prevented from acting on the default until the court resolves the matter.
Strategic Implications: Yellowstone injunctions can add months to the eviction timeline. Landlords should draft cure periods and default provisions with this risk in mind and work closely with litigation counsel when serving notices.
Step 3: Filing in Court
If the notice period expires without cure (or a Yellowstone injunction is denied), the landlord files a petition in Civil Court (NYC) or the appropriate local court.
Step 4: Trial and Judgment
Both parties present evidence. If the landlord prevails, the court issues a judgment of possession and a warrant of eviction. In NYC, only a city marshal or sheriff can execute the warrant.
Timeline Commercial
evictions in NYC frequently take 6 months to over a year from start to finish, accounting for court backlogs, potential trials, and tenant motions.
Self-Help: Strictly Prohibited
New York absolutely prohibits commercial self-help evictions. A landlord cannot:
- Change the locks on a commercial space.
- Shut off utilities, HVAC, or elevator access.
- Remove the tenant's inventory, equipment, or fixtures.
- Block access to the premises.
Even if the lease contains a "re-entry" clause, New York courts will not enforce it outside of the formal judicial process. Violations expose the landlord to wrongful eviction damages, lost business claims, and potentially the NYC Non-Residential Tenant Harassment Law's fines.
How Landager Helps
Landager tracks lease terms, HSTPA deadline compliance, and security deposit interest - making it easy to handle your property portfolio while staying compliant with New York regulations.
Back to
Fonti e Riferimenti Ufficiali
📬 Ricevi notifiche quando queste leggi cambiano
Ti invieremo un'email quando le leggi su proprietari e inquilini si aggiorneranno in Niente spam — solo modifiche legislative.




