Increase your productiveness with Residential Lease Complaints

Record managing consumes to half of your business hours. With DocHub, it is easy to reclaim your time and boost your team's productivity. Access Residential Lease Complaints category and check out all document templates related to your day-to-day workflows.

Easily use Residential Lease Complaints:

  1. Open Residential Lease Complaints and utilize Preview to find the appropriate form.
  2. Click on Get Form to begin working on it.
  3. Wait for your form to open in the online editor and begin modifying it.
  4. Add new fillable fields, symbols, and images, change pages order, and many more.
  5. Fill your template or prepare it for other contributors.
  6. Download or deliver the form by link, email attachment, or invite.

Speed up your day-to-day document managing using our Residential Lease Complaints. Get your free DocHub account right now to discover all templates.

Video Guide on Residential Lease Complaints management

video background

Commonly Asked Questions about Residential Lease Complaints

Call 311 and ask for the Tenant Helpline to get information on tenant rights and resources.
renew your lease or substantially increase your rent. ​Your landlord must give you at least 30 days notice if they are not planning to renew your lease or will raise your rent by more than 5%. If you have been living in your home for over a year, your landlord must give at least 60 days notice.
Tenants Rights and Responsibilities. In New York City, tenants have many rights relating to the safety and quality of their housing. Tenants should expect to live in safe, well-maintained buildings that are free from vermin, leaks, and hazardous conditions. Laws protect tenants from harassment and discrimination.
Before they can raise your rent (by 5% or more), the landlord must give you: 90 days notice if you have lived in your apartment two years or more. 60 days notice if you have lived in your apartment for more than one year. 30 days notice if you have lived in your apartment for less than one year.
However, they still must provide advance notice of an increase in rent for a new lease term. For a one-year lease term, landlords must produce a 60-day notice. A two-year lease term or more requires a 90-day notice. Anything shorter than a year warrants a 30-day notice for rent adjustments.
You can file a complaint by: Calling 311 or TTY (212) 504-4115. Using 311ONLINE or 311MOBILE.
no limit on how much your landlord can increase your rent. However, your landlord must give you advanced written notice before they can raise your rent 5% or more. advance written notice. This applies to month-to-month tenants without a lease as well.
For a two-year lease beginning on or after October 1, 2023, and on or before September 30, 2024: For the first year of the lease: 2.75% For the second year of the lease: 3.20% of the amount lawfully charged in the first year, excluding any increases other than the first-year guideline increase.