Lease clauses are governed by state law, so what's legal in New York may differ from anywhere else. Below are our plain-English guides for New York renters — 6 guides across 2 cities, each covering the New York statutes that actually apply.
Every guide below is written specifically for renters in New York. We explain the relevant New York statutes, any city-specific ordinances, the red flags to watch for in your lease, your legal rights as a tenant, and the step-by-step actions to take if something goes wrong.
What happens if you need to break your lease before it ends — fees, notice periods, and your rights, specific to your state.
What happens when you stay past your lease end date. Many landlords charge 150–200% rent during the holdover period.
How much can be charged, what it covers, when you get it back, and how to fight wrongful deductions.
Pet deposits, breed restrictions, and what ESA (emotional support animal) federal laws mean for your rental agreement.
When and how your landlord can raise your rent during the lease term — fixed increases vs CPI-linked.