Can a Landlord Refuse Section 8 in NYC?
No. In New York City, landlords cannot refuse to rent to someone solely because they have a Section 8 voucher or other housing subsidy. This has been the law since 2008, when the NYC Human Rights Law was amended to add "lawful source of income" as a protected class.
This means that saying "we don't accept Section 8," refusing to complete voucher paperwork, or treating voucher holders differently than other applicants is illegal and can result in significant penalties.
What the Law Says
Under the NYC Human Rights Law, it is illegal to discriminate based on a person's "lawful source of income." This includes:
- Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers (from NYCHA, HPD, or HCR)
- CityFHEPS
- FHEPS
- HASA (HIV/AIDS Services Administration)
- SOTA (Special One-Time Assistance)
- Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
- Social Security
- Veterans' GI Bill housing allowances
- Any other federal, state, or local public assistance or housing assistance
The law applies to almost all rental properties in New York City and covers landlords, property managers, real estate brokers, and agents.
What Landlords Cannot Do
The NYC Commission on Human Rights actively enforces source of income discrimination laws. The following actions are illegal:
Refusing vouchers outright:
Advertising discrimination:
Creating barriers for voucher holders:
Preferring certain vouchers over others:
All housing subsidies must be treated equally. Preferring one program over another still violates the law.
Treating voucher holders differently:
What Landlords Can Do
The source of income law does not eliminate your right to screen tenants. You can:
Apply consistent screening criteria:
The key word is consistent. Whatever criteria you apply to voucher holders must be the same criteria you apply to all applicants.
Calculate income requirements correctly: You can require that a tenant's income be 3x their monthly rent obligation. For voucher holders, this means 3x their portion of the rent, not 3x the total rent.
Example: If the total rent is $2,000 but the voucher covers $1,500 and the tenant pays $500, you can require the tenant to earn $1,500/month (3x their $500 portion). You cannot require $6,000/month (3x the total rent).
Reject applicants for legitimate reasons:
Any rejection must be based on consistently-applied criteria and documented. "We don't take vouchers" is never a valid reason.
Exceptions to the Law
There are only two narrow exceptions where landlords may not be required to accept vouchers under the NYC Human Rights Law:
- Owner-occupied two-family homes: If you live in a building with no more than two families living independently of each other, and you or a family member resides there, you may be exempt. The unit also cannot receive public assistance.
- Room rentals in owner-occupied units: If you rent a room in a unit where you or a family member lives.
Even if you fall into one of these exceptions, you may still be covered by New York State source of income protections or other applicable laws. When in doubt, consult an attorney or contact the NYC Commission on Human Rights at 212-416-0197.
Consequences of Discrimination
The NYC Commission on Human Rights takes source of income discrimination seriously and has ramped up enforcement in recent years. Consequences can include:
Monetary penalties:
Other remedies:
Recent enforcement examples:
Since 2018, the Commission has filed over 176 cases of source of income discrimination and obtained over $780,000 in damages and penalties.
How Tenants Document Discrimination
Voucher holders are increasingly aware of their rights and know how to document discrimination. Common methods include:
Recording conversations: New York is a one-party consent state, meaning tenants can legally record phone calls without telling you.
Testing: The Commission and fair housing organizations conduct "matched pair" testing, where one tester with a voucher and one without both inquire about the same apartment to see if they're treated differently.
Screenshots and saved messages: Texts, emails, and online messages can all be used as evidence.
Witness inquiries: A friend or advocate may call about the same apartment after a voucher holder is rejected to see if the unit is "suddenly" available.
If a tenant reports discrimination, the Commission may contact you to investigate. Having documented, consistently-applied screening criteria protects you from accusations that a rejection was voucher-based rather than criteria-based.
Best Practices for Compliance
Document your screening criteria: Write down your requirements before accepting applications. Apply them consistently to everyone.
Train your staff: Anyone who shows apartments, answers calls, or processes applications must understand that refusing vouchers is illegal.
Review your advertisements: Remove any language suggesting you won't accept vouchers or prefer non-voucher tenants.
Process applications promptly: Delays for voucher holders that don't occur for other applicants can be evidence of discrimination.
Complete required paperwork: The "administrative burden" of voucher paperwork is not a valid reason to reject voucher holders. Courts have specifically ruled on this.
Document rejections: If you deny an applicant, have a clear, legitimate reason based on your screening criteria. Document it.
Accept all voucher types equally: Don't pick and choose which programs you'll accept. CityFHEPS, Section 8, HASA, and other programs must all be treated the same.
The Business Case for Accepting Vouchers
Beyond legal compliance, there are good business reasons to accept voucher holders:
Guaranteed partial payment: 70-100% of rent comes directly from the government via direct deposit.
Longer tenancies: Research shows voucher holders in NYC stay in the program for over 15 years on average, and tend to remain in place longer than market-rate tenants.
Motivated tenants: Finding accepting landlords is difficult. Tenants have strong incentive to maintain the property and follow the lease.
Built-in accountability: Tenants risk losing their voucher (and years-long waitlist position) if evicted.
Free marketing: Housing Authorities maintain lists of available units and refer voucher holders to participating landlords.
Many landlords who initially resisted voucher tenants have become enthusiastic participants after experiencing the stability and reliability of the program.
Resources
NYC Commission on Human Rights:
NYS Division of Human Rights:
NYC Fair Housing:
Report Discrimination:
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Ready to accept voucher tenants? List your property on VoucherMatch and connect with qualified voucher holders searching for housing.
Have a voucher and facing discrimination? Document everything and report to the NYC Commission on Human Rights at 212-416-0197. You can also browse voucher-friendly listings from landlords who welcome your application.
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