New York Rent Increase Notice (2026): Requirements + Free Template Preview

Notify a tenant that the monthly rent will change on a future date, with the state-required advance notice.

The New York rule

30 days minimum notice

Governing statute: N.Y. Real Prop. Law § 226-c · Read the statute ↗

Special rule: For increases of 5% or more: 30 days' notice if the tenant has been in occupancy under 1 year; 60 days for 1–2 years; 90 days for more than 2 years. Rent-stabilized units follow separate rules, and the Good Cause Eviction Law (RPL Art. 6-A, eff. 4/20/2024) presumptively caps increases at CPI + 5% (max 10%) for covered units in NYC and opted-in municipalities.

Data version 2026.07.1, compiled July 2026. Verify with the current statute — laws change, and cities or counties may add stricter requirements.

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What a valid New York rent increase notice includes

  • • Full names of all tenants and the rental property address
  • • The landlord’s name and mailing address
  • • The current rent, the new rent, and the exact date the increase takes effect
  • • Service at least 30 days before the effective date (N.Y. Real Prop. Law § 226-c)
  • • A certificate of service recording how and when the notice was delivered — courts routinely ask for this

NoticeKit generates all of the above, computes your actual notice period, and warns you — citing N.Y. Real Prop. Law § 226-c — if your dates fall short of the New York minimum.

Template preview

NOTICE OF RENT INCREASE

State of New YorkN.Y. Real Prop. Law § 226-c

TO: [Tenant name(s)]

PREMISES: [Rental property address]

PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that effective [date], the monthly rent for the premises described above will be increased from $[current] to $[new] per month...

[Full notice continues: statutory reference, signature block, and certificate of service — generated in the wizard]

Other New York notices

Rent Increase notices in other states

NoticeKit is not a law firm and this page is not legal advice. Notice periods shown reflect the main statutory rule as of data version 2026.07.1; tiers, exemptions, and local ordinances may change the requirement for your situation. Verify with the current statute — laws change.