NYC Housing Court and the Eviction Process Explained for Landlords
If you own rental property in the Bronx or anywhere in New York City, understanding the eviction process isn't optional — it's essential. NYC housing court operates under some of the most tenant-protective laws in the country, and one procedural misstep can cost you months of lost rent and thousands in legal fees. Think of this as a straight-talk guide from someone who's been navigating these courts alongside NYC landlords since 2010.
Step 1: The Legal Foundation — You Can't Skip the Notice
Before you ever set foot in housing court, you must serve the tenant with the proper written notice. The type of notice depends on the reason for eviction:
- Non-payment of rent: A 14-Day Rent Demand notifying the tenant of the amount owed.
- Lease violation: A 10-Day Notice to Cure, giving the tenant a chance to fix the problem.
- End of tenancy / holdover: A 30-Day or 90-Day Notice of Termination, depending on how long the tenant has lived there.
Serving the wrong notice — or serving it incorrectly — can get your case dismissed before it even begins. Notices must be delivered in specific ways outlined by New York law. This is where many landlords trip up.
Step 2: Filing a Petition in Housing Court
If the tenant doesn't comply after the notice period, you file a Notice of Petition and Petition with the NYC Housing Court. In the Bronx, that's the Bronx Housing Court at 1118 Grand Concourse. There are filing fees involved, and your paperwork must be precise. Any errors can lead to adjournments that drag out your timeline.
Once filed, the court will schedule a hearing — typically within a few weeks, though backlogs can push that out further.
Step 3: The Court Appearance
On your court date, one of a few things happens:
- The tenant doesn't show — you may receive a default judgment in your favor.
- The tenant appears and you settle — many cases resolve here through a stipulation agreement (a negotiated payment plan or move-out date).
- The case goes to trial — a judge hears both sides and issues a ruling.
Here's the reality: NYC judges lean toward giving tenants every opportunity to stay housed. Coming prepared with thorough documentation — leases, rent ledgers, notice receipts, communication records — is non-negotiable.
Step 4: The Warrant of Eviction
If the judge rules in your favor, you receive a judgment of possession. But you're still not done. You must then apply for a Warrant of Eviction and arrange for a NYC Marshal to carry out the physical removal if the tenant still won't leave. Landlords cannot change locks, remove belongings, or shut off utilities themselves — that's an illegal lockout, and it will land you in legal trouble.
Step 5: After the Eviction
Once the unit is vacated, document everything with photos and video before touching anything. You'll want a clear record for security deposit disputes and any potential small claims filings for unpaid rent or damages.
The Honest Truth About NYC Evictions
From start to finish, an uncontested non-payment case in NYC can take 3 to 6 months. A contested case? Easily 6 to 12 months or longer. The process is designed to be slow, and navigating it without experience or support is genuinely stressful.
This is exactly why so many Bronx and NYC landlords work with a professional property manager — not just to collect rent, but to stay legally protected, document everything properly, and respond quickly when problems arise.
Let DoryAngel Handle It For You
At DoryAngel Asset Management, we've been protecting NYC property owners since 2010. Our flat-fee management starts at just $99/month — so you get professional oversight without the unpredictable percentage-based fees. From lease enforcement to housing court guidance, we're in your corner.
Ready to stop navigating this alone?
Book a free 30-minute consultation here and let's talk about your property.
📍 557 Grand Concourse, Bronx, NY 📞 (516) 847-4999 ✉️ office@doryangel.com