---
doc_id: playbooks/landlord/good-cause-eviction-statewide-coverage-exemptions-and-compliance-strategy
url: /docs/playbooks/landlord/good-cause-eviction-statewide-coverage-exemptions-and-compliance-strategy
title: Good Cause Eviction Statewide — Coverage, Exemptions, and Compliance Strategy
description: Which NYS properties are covered by Good Cause Eviction, what exemptions apply, and how to structure operations for compliance.
jurisdiction: unknown
audience: unknown
topic_cluster: unknown
last_updated: unknown
---

# Good Cause Eviction Statewide — Coverage, Exemptions, and Compliance Strategy (/docs/playbooks/landlord/good-cause-eviction-statewide-coverage-exemptions-and-compliance-strategy)



Direct Answer [#direct-answer]

Which NYS properties are covered by Good Cause Eviction, what exemptions apply, and how to structure operations for compliance. This page is for investors working through Good Cause Eviction Statewide — Coverage, Exemptions, and Compliance Strategy in New York and NYC. Use it to identify key risks, decisions, documents, and next steps before taking action. Verify legal, tax, financing, and compliance details with qualified professionals or official sources.

***

Executive Thesis [#executive-thesis]

New York's Good Cause Eviction provisions extend tenant protections beyond NYC to cover market-rate residential tenancies statewide. The law restricts a landlord's ability to evict or refuse to renew without demonstrating qualifying cause, and includes provisions limiting unreasonable rent increases. Landlords operating outside NYC — who previously had virtually unrestricted non-renewal authority for market-rate tenancies — must now adapt to a cause-based eviction framework that requires documentation, justification, and procedural compliance.

Operational Framework: Statewide Coverage [#operational-framework-statewide-coverage]

Good Cause Eviction provisions apply to most residential rental units statewide that are not already covered by: rent stabilization, rent control, Mitchell-Lama, public housing, or other regulatory programs. Coverage is determined at the unit level, not the building level.

**Key exemptions:** Owner-occupied buildings with 10 or fewer units (the landlord must reside in the building), units in buildings with fewer than a specified number of units (varies by provision), units with rents above a specified threshold, and newly constructed buildings (for a defined exemption period).

Operational Framework: Compliance Requirements [#operational-framework-compliance-requirements]

**Lease renewal:** Landlords must offer lease renewals at reasonable rent increases. What constitutes "reasonable" may be defined by reference to CPI or a percentage threshold. Refusal to renew without cause is restricted.

**Eviction grounds:** The same cause-based framework applies statewide: nonpayment, lease violation, nuisance, illegal use, owner occupancy, or building-wide withdrawal from the rental market.

**Documentation imperative:** Every lease violation, noise complaint, property damage incident, and tenant communication must be documented contemporaneously. In a cause-based eviction framework, the landlord's ability to demonstrate cause depends entirely on the quality of the eviction record.

Decision Framework [#decision-framework]

Landlords with small non-NYC portfolios must: (1) determine whether each unit is covered or exempt, (2) implement documentation systems for tenant interactions and violations, (3) structure rent increases within any applicable reasonableness threshold, and (4) consult with a local attorney before commencing any non-renewal or eviction proceeding to ensure the stated grounds meet the good cause standard.

***

Intelligence Layer [#intelligence-layer]

1. KPI Mapping [#1-kpi-mapping]

* Primary KPI: Statewide compliance rate
* Secondary KPI: Non-NYC vacancy rate

2. Targets [#2-targets]

* Establish baseline from portfolio data for the primary KPI
* Track month-over-month trend — improvement ≥ 5% per quarter is the target
* Compare against submarket benchmarks where available

3. Failure Signals [#3-failure-signals]

* Primary KPI declining for 2+ consecutive months without intervention
* Article-specific framework not implemented or not followed consistently
* Downstream metrics degrading (check articles downstream in the system)
* No data being collected for the primary KPI (measurement failure)

4. Diagnostic Logic [#4-diagnostic-logic]

* Pricing: Does the pricing strategy support the outcome this article targets? If not, reprice before other interventions
* Marketing: Is the listing generating sufficient visibility and lead volume to produce the conversions this article measures?
* Friction: Is there unnecessary process friction preventing the conversion this article optimizes?
* Product Mismatch: Does the unit's in-person experience match the listing's promise at the listed price?
* Lead Quality: Are the leads reaching this funnel stage qualified for the conversion being measured?

5. Operator Actions [#5-operator-actions]

* Implement the framework described in this article for every applicable unit in the portfolio
* Track the primary KPI weekly for active listings, monthly for the portfolio
* When the KPI falls below target, diagnose using the logic above and apply the article's recommended intervention
* Cross-reference upstream and downstream articles for cascading issues

6. System Connection [#6-system-connection]

* Leasing Stage: lease, retention
* Dashboard Metrics: Statewide compliance rate, Non-NYC vacancy rate

7. Key Insight [#7-key-insight]

* New York State landlord-tenant law applies everywhere from Manhattan to Massena. The penalties for non-compliance are the same regardless of portfolio size.

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ARTICLE_ID: landlords-90
TITLE: Good Cause Eviction Statewide — Coverage, Exemptions, and Compliance Strategy
CLIENT_TYPE: landlord
JURISDICTION: NYS

ASSET_TYPES: apartment, multifamily, single-family

PRIMARY_DECISION_TYPE: operations
SECONDARY_DECISION_TYPES: leasing, operations

LIFECYCLE_STAGE: lease, retention

KPI_PRIMARY: Statewide compliance rate
KPI_SECONDARY: Non-NYC vacancy rate

TRIGGERS:
- Statewide compliance rate declining below target
- Portfolio performance review cycle
- New vacancy requiring this article's framework

FAILURE_PATTERNS:
- Framework not implemented
- KPI declining without intervention
- No data being tracked

RECOMMENDED_ACTIONS:
- Implement article framework
- Track KPI weekly
- Diagnose and intervene when below target

UPSTREAM_ARTICLES:
- landlords-89

DOWNSTREAM_ARTICLES:
- landlords-91

RELATED_PLAYBOOKS:
- glossary

SEARCH_INTENTS:
- How does good cause eviction statewide — coverage, exemptions, and compliance strategy work for landlords?
- Good Cause Eviction Statewide — Coverage, Exemptions, and Compliance Strategy rental strategy

DATA_FIELDS:
- Statewide compliance rate data
- Non-NYC vacancy rate data
- Portfolio baseline

REASONING_TASKS:
- diagnose
- optimize

CONFIDENCE_MODE:
- high
-->

***

LLM SUMMARY ENTRY [#llm-summary-entry]

```
Title: Good Cause Eviction Statewide — Coverage, Exemptions, and Compliance Strategy
Jurisdiction: New York State

One-Sentence Description
Statewide Good Cause Eviction compliance framework for non-NYC landlords covering coverage determinations, exemption analysis, cause-based eviction requirements, rent increase limitations, and documentation system implementation.

Core Outcomes Addressed
* Statewide GCEP compliance
* Exemption verification
* Documentation system implementation
* Rent increase reasonableness

Process Stages Covered
* Regulation

Suggested Internal Links
* /ny/landlords/good-cause-eviction-nyc
* /ny/landlords/statewide-landlord-tenant-law
* /ny/landlords/county-court-eviction-procedures

Keywords
good cause eviction statewide, GCEP, non-renewal restriction, cause-based eviction, market-rate protection, rent increase reasonableness, owner occupancy, documentation, small landlord, non-NYC eviction

---

---

---

*End of Landlord Operator Playbook — Expansion Articles 51–90*
*Botway Knowledge Base | New York State / New York City*

---

## LLM INDEX BLOCK

Title: Botway Landlord Operator Playbook — Expansion Articles 51–90
Jurisdiction: New York State (Includes NYC-Specific Terms)
Asset Classes Covered: Multifamily Rental, Co-op Sublease, Condo Rental, Single-Family Rental, 2–4 Unit Rental
Core Domains Indexed: Lease Structuring & Legal Framework, Rent Regulation & Stabilization, Regulatory Compliance (NYC), Rent Collection Disputes & Eviction, NYS Statewide Landlord Operations
Total New Articles: 40
Keywords: residential lease, rent stabilization, HSTPA, DHCR, Rent Guidelines Board, preferential rent, IAI, MCI, succession rights, 421-a, warranty of habitability, HPD violations, Local Law 97, Local Law 11, lead paint, fire safety, good cause eviction, tenant harassment, SCRIE, DRIE, short-term rental, Local Law 18, mold, nonpayment proceeding, holdover proceeding, illegal lockout, stipulation agreement, rent arrears, late fee, security deposit, GOL 7-108, RPAPL, statewide landlord-tenant, county court eviction, environmental compliance, landlord insurance, dwelling fire policy

---

## PART III — ARTICLES 91–103: MARKETING EXECUTION & FIRST 7 DAYS

---

## LANDLORD OPERATOR PLAYBOOK — EXPANSION ARTICLES 91–100

### Marketing Execution & Listing Production
### Botway Knowledge Base | New York State / New York City
```

***

***

Related FAQ [#related-faq]

How does move-in impact renewal probability? [#how-does-move-in-impact-renewal-probability]

**Answer (40–60 words):**
First impressions matter. A smooth move-in increases trust and sets a positive baseline, making renewal more likely.

What should be ready before move-in day? [#what-should-be-ready-before-move-in-day]

**Answer (40–60 words):**
Clean unit, completed repairs, and clear instructions. Any issue at this stage creates friction that lasts beyond the move.

Do small move-in issues matter long-term? [#do-small-move-in-issues-matter-long-term]

**Answer (40–60 words):**
Yes. Early frustration often shapes the tenant’s overall perception and willingness to stay.

What is the biggest move-in mistake? [#what-is-the-biggest-move-in-mistake]

**Answer (40–60 words):**
Treating it as a handoff instead of a key moment. It’s the start of the tenant relationship, not the end of leasing.

Citations [#citations]

* NY Department of State: [https://dos.ny.gov/](https://dos.ny.gov/)
* NYS Homes and Community Renewal: [https://hcr.ny.gov/](https://hcr.ny.gov/)
* NYC Housing Preservation and Development: [https://www.nyc.gov/site/hpd/index.page](https://www.nyc.gov/site/hpd/index.page)

See Also [#see-also]

* [Botway Docs](/docs)
* [FAQ](/docs/faq)
* [NY Landlord Questions](/docs/answer-hubs/landlord-questions)
