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Rent increases frozen in New York City

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@fyinews team

26/06/2026

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  1. The Rent Guidelines Board, New York City’s body responsible for rent regulation, voted on Thursday to freeze rent increases for nearly 1,000,000 apartments—around 40% of the city’s total housing stock—delivering on one of Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s key campaign promises.
  2. The measure applies to leases covered by the rent stabilization system, a tenant protection scheme under which landlords cannot freely raise the rent when a lease expires. Instead, the Board sets the maximum allowable increase each year.

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The Rent Guidelines Board, the New York City body responsible for regulated rents, voted on Thursday, by 7 votes to 1, to freeze rent increases for nearly one million rent-stabilized apartments. The decision applies to both one-year and two-year lease renewals beginning on October 1 and covers more than 40% of the city’s housing stock.

This marks the first time the Board has simultaneously frozen rent increases for both categories of leases, fulfilling a key campaign pledge by Mayor Zohran Mamdani. Under the rent stabilization system, landlords cannot freely increase rents when a lease expires. Instead, the Board determines the maximum permitted increase each year. For comparison, during the previous period, the caps were 3% for one-year leases and 4.5% for two-year leases.

The decision comes as the city’s housing vacancy rate stands at just 1.4%, a level widely regarded as a housing emergency.

The decision comes amid an exceptionally tight housing market: New York City’s vacancy rate is only 1.4%, a level the city officially treats as a housing emergency. Tenant advocacy groups welcomed the measure, calling it immediate relief from the rising cost of living.

Landlord organizations warned that the freeze, combined with rising insurance, maintenance, and property tax costs, could place significant financial pressure on older buildings or properties already operating on thin margins. Tenant groups, however, argue that the solution is not further rent increases but targeted public policy interventions.

 

Sources: New York Times, Rent Guidelines Board

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