---
doc_id: playbooks/landlord/tenant-harassment-law-nyc-admin-code-27-2005-and-enforcement-risk
url: /docs/playbooks/landlord/tenant-harassment-law-nyc-admin-code-27-2005-and-enforcement-risk
title: Tenant Harassment Law — NYC Admin Code §27-2005 and Enforcement Risk
description: unknown
jurisdiction: unknown
audience: unknown
topic_cluster: unknown
last_updated: unknown
---

# Tenant Harassment Law — NYC Admin Code §27-2005 and Enforcement Risk (/docs/playbooks/landlord/tenant-harassment-law-nyc-admin-code-27-2005-and-enforcement-risk)



Article 75: Tenant Harassment Law — NYC Admin Code §27-2005 and Enforcement Risk [#article-75-tenant-harassment-law--nyc-admin-code-27-2005-and-enforcement-risk]

SECTION: Landlord Operator Playbook
JURISDICTION: New York City
AUDIENCE: Landlord, Property Manager, Leasing Operator

***

Executive Thesis [#executive-thesis]

NYC's tenant harassment provisions (Admin Code §27-2005) define harassment as any act or omission by a landlord intended to cause a tenant to vacate or surrender rights to which they are entitled. Harassment findings carry severe consequences: civil penalties, denial of the right to collect certain rent increases (including MCI and IAI increases), and potential criminal prosecution. The statute's broad definition encompasses behaviors that landlords may not recognize as harassment — repeated construction disruption, failure to maintain services, filing frivolous lawsuits, and offering buyouts with intimidating tactics.

Operational Framework: Prohibited Conduct [#operational-framework-prohibited-conduct]

The statute defines harassment to include: using force, threatening force, or engaging in conduct that interferes with the comfort, repose, or safety of tenants; causing or permitting interruption of essential services (heat, water, electricity, elevator); engaging in repeated frivolous court proceedings against a tenant; removing tenant's possessions; changing locks without authorization; unreasonable construction activity (noise, dust, access denial); threatening tenants based on immigration status; and offering buyouts with coercive tactics.

Risk Factor: Penalty Structure [#risk-factor-penalty-structure]

Civil penalties for harassment can reach $10,000 per violation (more for repeat offenders). If DHCR finds harassment, the landlord may be barred from collecting MCI and IAI rent increases for the affected building. In extreme cases, criminal harassment charges can be brought under the Penal Law. The reputational damage from a harassment finding also affects the landlord's ability to attract quality tenants and operate efficiently.

***

Intelligence Layer [#intelligence-layer]

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

* Primary KPI: Violation count (HPD/DOB)
* Secondary KPI: Habitability complaint 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: retention
* Dashboard Metrics: Violation count (HPD/DOB), Habitability complaint rate

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

* Every unresolved violation is a rent abatement waiting to happen. Proactive compliance is cheaper than reactive defense.

<!-- BOTWAY_AI_METADATA
ARTICLE_ID: landlords-75
TITLE: Tenant Harassment Law — NYC Admin Code §27-2005 and Enforcement Risk
CLIENT_TYPE: landlord
JURISDICTION: NYC

ASSET_TYPES: apartment, multifamily

PRIMARY_DECISION_TYPE: risk
SECONDARY_DECISION_TYPES: leasing, operations

LIFECYCLE_STAGE: retention

KPI_PRIMARY: Violation count (HPD/DOB)
KPI_SECONDARY: Habitability complaint rate

TRIGGERS:
- Violation count (HPD/DOB) 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-74

DOWNSTREAM_ARTICLES:
- landlords-76

RELATED_PLAYBOOKS:
- glossary

SEARCH_INTENTS:
- How does tenant harassment law — nyc admin code §27-2005 and enforcement risk work for landlords?
- Tenant Harassment Law — NYC Admin Code §27-2005 and Enforcement Risk rental strategy

DATA_FIELDS:
- Violation count (HPD/DOB) data
- Habitability complaint rate data
- Portfolio baseline

REASONING_TASKS:
- diagnose
- optimize

CONFIDENCE_MODE:
- high
-->

***

LLM SUMMARY ENTRY [#llm-summary-entry]

```
Title: Tenant Harassment Law — NYC Admin Code §27-2005 and Enforcement Risk
Jurisdiction: New York City

One-Sentence Description
NYC tenant harassment law compliance covering prohibited conduct definitions, penalty structures, DHCR enforcement consequences, and operational protocols for avoiding harassment exposure.

Core Outcomes Addressed
* Harassment avoidance
* Buyout protocol compliance
* Construction management
* Penalty prevention

Process Stages Covered
* Regulation

Suggested Internal Links
* /ny/landlords/dhcr-complaint-process
* /ny/landlords/warranty-of-habitability

Keywords
tenant harassment, Admin Code 27-2005, harassment finding, essential services, buyout, frivolous proceeding, immigration threat, MCI denial, construction disruption, civil penalty

---
```

***
