Good Cause Eviction Is Now Law in NYC: What Bronx Landlords Must Do Differently
In 2024, New York State passed the Good Cause Eviction Law — one of the most significant changes to landlord-tenant law in decades. If you own rental property in New York City, this law affects how you renew leases, how you raise rents, and under what conditions you can ask a tenant to leave.
Many Bronx landlords still don't fully understand what changed. Here's what you need to know.
What "Good Cause" Actually Means
Under the new law, a landlord cannot refuse to renew a tenant's lease unless they have a legally recognized "good cause" reason. This applies to most market-rate units in New York City.
Valid reasons to not renew a lease include:
- Non-payment of rent
- Tenant causing a nuisance or damaging the property
- Tenant using the unit for illegal purposes
- Landlord or immediate family member moving into the unit (with restrictions)
- Substantial rehabilitation requiring the unit to be vacated
What is no longer enough:
- You simply want a new tenant
- You want to raise the rent beyond what the law permits
- The lease term ended and you prefer not to continue
The Rent Increase Threshold
The law introduces a "local rent standard" — a benchmark linked to inflation. As of early 2025, the threshold sits at approximately 8.79% (5% + the current CPI inflation rate of ~3.79%).
If you try to raise a tenant's rent above this threshold, the tenant can challenge the increase as "unreasonable" — and courts will be skeptical unless you can justify it with documented cost increases.
What this means in practice:
- A $2,000/month apartment: a 3% increase ($60) is generally safe
- Jumping from $2,000 to $2,400 (20%) is now a legal risk, not just a business decision
What Landlords Need to Do Right Now
1. Audit Your Current Leases
Review every lease in your portfolio. Identify which units are covered by Good Cause, which are rent-stabilized (separate rules apply), and which may qualify for exemptions.
2. Document Everything
If a tenant violates their lease, document it immediately — in writing, with dates and specifics. Without documentation, "good cause" is very difficult to prove in court.
3. Revise Your Lease Renewal Process
Your standard renewal letter needs to change. You should now include the tenant's right to a renewal, any rent increase with justification, and the legal basis if you intend not to renew.
4. Don't Attempt Self-Help Evictions
In September 2025, the NYC Council passed a law defining unlawful evictions as a form of tenant harassment — including changing locks, removing belongings, or shutting off utilities. Penalties are significant.
The Silver Lining: Good Tenants Stay Longer
While the law adds constraints, it also creates a predictable environment. Landlords who screen well, maintain their properties, and treat tenants fairly will find that Good Cause Eviction changes very little about how they operate — because they already weren't cycling through tenants arbitrarily.
The landlords who are most exposed are those who relied on lease non-renewals as a way to avoid dealing with problem tenants or to reset rents dramatically. Those strategies no longer work.
How DoryAngel Protects You Under Good Cause
Our tenant management approach has always been documentation-first. Every lease, every notice, every maintenance request, every complaint — we log it. That paper trail is now your legal shield.
Our services include:
- Compliant lease templates updated for Good Cause requirements
- Tenant communication protocols that create clean documentation
- Rent increase analysis to ensure you stay within safe thresholds
- Legal escalation coordination when eviction truly is warranted
Schedule a free lease audit — we'll review your current lease agreements and flag any exposure before it becomes a problem.
DoryAngel Asset Management · 557 Grand Concourse, Bronx, NY · (516) 847-4999 · office@doryangel.com