New York Eviction Process: Notice Requirements and Good Cause Protections
Understand the New York eviction process including 14-day rent demands, holdover notices, the 2024 Good Cause law, and self-help eviction prohibitions.
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.
Evicting a tenant in New York is one of the most heavily regulated processes in the United States. The state's procedural requirements—amplified by the 2024 Good Cause Eviction Law—create a lengthy, court-driven process designed to protect tenants from arbitrary displacement.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Eviction laws in New York vary between NYC and the rest of the state and are strictly interpreted. Always consult a licensed attorney for guidance specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.
Good Cause Eviction Law (2024)
Effective April 20, 2024, the Good Cause Eviction Law applies in New York City and any other municipality that opts in. It requires landlords to demonstrate a legally defined "good cause" to evict a tenant or refuse to renew their lease.
Enumerated "Good Causes" Include:
- Non-payment of rent (but only if the demanded increase was "reasonable").
- The tenant is causing a nuisance or engaging in illegal activity.
- The tenant refuses access for necessary repairs.
- The landlord intends to demolish or substantially renovate the building (with specific conditions).
- The landlord or their immediate family member intends to occupy the unit personally.
What This Means for Landlords
If your property is covered by the GCEL, you can no longer simply decline to renew a lease at its expiration. You must prove one of the enumerated causes and provide the appropriate notice.
Pre-Eviction Notices
Non-Payment of Rent: The 14-Day Demand
Before filing a non-payment proceeding, the landlord must serve a 14-day written demand for rent (commonly called a "rent demand notice"). The notice must state the amount of rent owed and the approximate period during which the rent accrued. If the tenant pays the amount owed within the 14 days, the landlord cannot proceed.
Holdover: Termination Notices
For non-rent-related evictions (lease expiration, lease violations, etc.), the required notice period depends on the tenant's length of occupancy:
| Length of Occupancy | Notice Period |
|---|---|
| Less than 1 year | 30 days |
| 1 to 2 years | 60 days |
| More than 2 years | 90 days |
This sliding scale was established by the HSTPA and applies statewide for month-to-month tenancies and tenancies at will.
The Court Process
All evictions in New York go through Housing Court (in NYC) or local courts (outside NYC).
- Filing the Petition: After the notice period expires, the landlord files a petition and notice of petition with the court.
- Service: The tenant must be properly served with the petition.
- The Hearing: Both parties appear before a judge. Tenants have the right to an attorney, and in NYC, low-income tenants have access to free legal counsel through the "Right to Counsel" program.
- The Judgment & Warrant: If the landlord prevails, the court issues a judgment of possession and a warrant of eviction. Even after the warrant issues, the tenant generally has at least 14 days before a marshal or sheriff can execute the eviction.
Self-Help Evictions: Strictly Illegal
No matter how far behind on rent a tenant may be, a New York landlord may never:
- Change the locks.
- Shut off utilities or services.
- Remove the tenant's belongings.
- Block access to common areas.
- Use threats, intimidation, or harassment.
These actions constitute illegal lockouts, and the tenant can call the police, obtain an emergency court order, and sue the landlord for significant damages.
Rent-Stabilized Tenant Protections
Rent-stabilized tenants have even stronger protections. Landlords must renew the lease upon expiration (at the RGB-approved rate), and eviction is limited to an even narrower set of causes, such as the landlord's personal occupancy (owner use) with stringent verification requirements.
How Landager Helps
New York's eviction timelines are among the longest and most document-intensive in the country. A single procedural misstep—serving the wrong notice, missing a date, or failing to properly calculate the demand—resets the entire process. Landager generates accurate, RPAPL-compliant notices based on your lease data, tracks service dates and court deadlines, and maintains an unalterable communication log to ensure your case is airtight if litigation becomes necessary.
Sources & Official References
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