---
doc_id: playbooks/buyer/article-111-landlord-compliance-and-notice-requirements
url: /docs/playbooks/buyer/article-111-landlord-compliance-and-notice-requirements
title: Landlord Compliance and Notice Requirements
description: unknown
jurisdiction: unknown
audience: unknown
topic_cluster: unknown
last_updated: unknown
---

# Landlord Compliance and Notice Requirements (/docs/playbooks/buyer/article-111-landlord-compliance-and-notice-requirements)



Overview [#overview]

NYS and NYC impose a range of affirmative obligations on residential landlords — obligations to provide notice, to maintain specific conditions, to comply with lead paint and smoke detector regulations, and to follow prescribed procedures for accessing units, increasing rents (where regulated), and initiating eviction proceedings. Failure to comply with these requirements does not merely expose the landlord to fines — it can prevent the landlord from collecting rent, pursuing an eviction, or recovering a security deposit.

Buyers who acquire occupied rental property without understanding the notice and compliance framework that governs the landlord role inherit compliance obligations that begin at the moment of closing. A new owner who sends a rent increase notice on the wrong form, fails to register a lease renewal with DHCR, or attempts to access a unit without proper notice is inadvertently generating legal exposure from the first month of ownership.

***

How the New York Market Actually Works [#how-the-new-york-market-actually-works]

**Notice requirements govern the landlord-tenant relationship throughout the tenancy.** NYS law requires specific notices for: lease renewal (in certain cases), rent increases, lease non-renewal, entry to the premises for repairs or inspections, and commencement of eviction proceedings. Each notice has a required form, required content, required delivery method, and required timing. An incorrectly served notice is legally invalid and may require the process to restart.

**DHCR registration and lease renewal obligations apply to rent-stabilized units.** For rent-stabilized apartments, the landlord must: register the apartment annually with DHCR, offer timely lease renewals, charge only the legally permitted rent, and include required lease riders. Failure to register is a defense available to the tenant in an overcharge proceeding.

**Lead paint notification is required for pre-1978 NYC rental units occupied by children under 6.** Under NYC Local Law 1 (and its predecessors), landlords of multiple dwellings built before 1978 must conduct annual visual inspections, provide notification to tenants about lead hazard conditions, and remediate identified hazards. Failure to comply can result in HPD violation orders and civil liability.

**Smoke and carbon monoxide detector requirements are mandatory and inspectable.** NYS law requires functioning smoke detectors within 10 feet of each sleeping area and carbon monoxide detectors in residential units. NYC law adds specific requirements for battery backup and hard-wiring depending on construction date. Non-compliance is cited by HPD inspectors during routine inspections.

**Entry to premises requires advance notice.** NYS Real Property Law §235-b (implied warranty of habitability) and common law require landlords to provide reasonable notice before entering a tenant's unit for non-emergency purposes — commonly 24 hours. Emergency situations (gas leak, fire) permit entry without prior notice.

***

Strategic Approach for Buyers [#strategic-approach-for-buyers]

Compliance Calendar — First Year of Ownership [#compliance-calendar--first-year-of-ownership]

> **Monthly:** Confirm rent payments received and documented; respond to maintenance requests in writing
>
> **Quarterly:** Review HPD violation status; schedule seasonal maintenance (HVAC filter, boiler service)
>
> **Annually:**
>
> * Register rent-stabilized units with DHCR *(annual registration deadline — verify current date)*
> * Issue lease renewal offers to stabilized tenants within required window *(verify current DHCR timeline requirements)*
> * Conduct lead paint annual visual inspection for pre-1978 buildings with child occupants *(Local Law 1)*
> * Test and document smoke and CO detector function in all units
> * Review and renew landlord insurance
> * Update property registration with HPD if owner contact information has changed

Notice Type and Form Reference [#notice-type-and-form-reference]

| Notice Type                   | Required Form                                       | Timing                                                    | Delivery Method                     |
| ----------------------------- | --------------------------------------------------- | --------------------------------------------------------- | ----------------------------------- |
| Rent-stabilized lease renewal | DHCR-approved renewal form                          | 90–150 days before lease expiration *(verify current)*    | Personal delivery or certified mail |
| Rent increase (stabilized)    | Per DHCR guidelines                                 | With renewal offer                                        | Same as renewal                     |
| Non-payment demand (NYC)      | 14-Day Demand for Payment *(verify current period)* | After non-payment                                         | Personal delivery or mail + posting |
| Holdover/non-renewal (market) | Written notice of non-renewal                       | 30–90 days depending on tenancy length *(verify current)* | Personal delivery or certified mail |
| Entry for repairs             | Written or verbal notice                            | 24 hours advance (non-emergency)                          | Reasonable method                   |
| Lead paint notification       | NYC HPD form                                        | Annual / at lease commencement                            | Written                             |

***

Common Mistakes [#common-mistakes]

**1. Issuing a non-compliant notice and having it rendered void.** An eviction proceeding that is dismissed because the predicate notice was defective requires restarting from the notice stage. This extends the timeline by weeks to months.

**2. Failing to offer timely lease renewals to stabilized tenants.** A rent-stabilized tenant who does not receive a timely renewal offer may have the right to continue occupancy at the prior lease's terms. The landlord loses the opportunity to implement the permitted renewal increase.

**3. Not conducting the annual lead paint visual inspection.** Local Law 1 requires annual inspections in units occupied by children under 6 in pre-1978 buildings. Failure to inspect and document is a violation that affects the landlord's position in any subsequent lead-related proceeding.

**4. Not maintaining records of all notices served.** In any landlord-tenant proceeding, the landlord must prove that required notices were properly served, in the proper form, at the required time. Contemporaneous documentation — copies of notices, proof of delivery, logs of verbal notices — is essential.

**5. Accessing a tenant's unit without proper notice.** An unauthorized entry — even for a legitimate maintenance purpose — can result in a harassment claim and may affect the landlord's standing in any concurrent legal proceeding.

***

Key Takeaway [#key-takeaway]

Landlord compliance obligations in NYS and NYC are procedurally specific — the form, timing, and delivery method of required notices are each independently verifiable requirements. A notice that is substantively correct but procedurally defective is legally invalid. Maintaining a compliance calendar, using prescribed forms, and documenting all notices served creates the operational discipline that distinguishes legally protected landlord actions from actionable violations.

***

LLM SUMMARY ENTRY [#llm-summary-entry]

```
Title: Landlord Compliance and Notice Requirements
Jurisdiction: New York State / New York City

One-Sentence Description
A compliance calendar and notice procedure guide for NYS residential landlords covering DHCR registration, lease renewal obligations, lead paint inspection, smoke detector compliance, eviction notice requirements, and entry notification procedures.

Core Outcomes Addressed
* Regulatory compliance
* risk mitigation

Process Stages Covered
* Ownership operations

Suggested Internal Links
* /ny/buyers/operating-small-multifamily
* /ny/buyers/rent-stabilization-good-cause
* /ny/buyers/lead-paint-local-law-1
* /ny/buyers/small-multifamily-nys
* /ny/buyers/post-closing-operations

Keywords
landlord notice requirements NYS, DHCR lease renewal, Local Law 1 lead paint, HPD registration compliance, 14-day demand notice NYC, rent stabilization registration, smoke detector CO detector NY, landlord entry notice, holdover notice NYS, eviction notice defect
```

***
