FURMAN CENTER FOR REAL ESTATE & URBAN POLICY NEW YORK UNIVERSITY S C H O O L O F L A W • W A G N E R S C H O O L OF P U B L I C S E R V I C E 139 MacDougal Street, 2nd Floor, New York, NY 10012 ∙ Tel: (212) 998 6713 ∙ Fax: (212) 995 4313 ∙ www.furmancenter.org FACT BRIEF Rent Stabilization in New York City Next week, the U.S. Supreme Court is expected to announce whether it will hear Harmon v. Kimmel, a case with potentially dramatic implications for New York City’s housing market. The case challenges the constitutionality of rent-stabilization in New York City. Were the Supreme Court to take the case, and side with the Harmons after hearing arguments, nearly half of the rental units in New York City could be affected, and the reverberations likely would be felt throughout the entire housing market. Table A shows that in 2011, New York City was home to 1,025,214 rent-regulated units, representing 47 percent of the city’s total rental housing stock, according to the 2011 New York City Housing and Vacancy Survey. The stock of rent-regulated units includes a relatively small number of rentcontrolled units—approximately 38,000—but a much larger number of rent-stabilized units. Both units subject to rent control and units subject to rent stabilization fall under strict rules governing rent increases, obligations to provide services, and the Table A: Housing Stock in New York City, 2011 Total Housing Units Share of Rental NYC Units 3,187,574 - Share of Total Units - Owner Occupied Units 1,014,940 - 31.8% Rental Units 2,172,634 - 68.2% Rent-Stabilized 986,840 45.4% 31.0% Rent-Controlled 38,374 1.8% 1.2% Market Rate 849,800 39.1% 26.7% Other Rental Units* 297,620 13.7% 9.3% *Other Rental Units includes Public Housing, Mitchell-Lama, In Rem, HUD-Regulated, Article 4, Municipal Loan, and Loft Board Regulated Units. circumstances under which tenants can be evicted. Rent control applies only to buildings built before February 1947 and to units occupied by a tenant (and in some cases, his or her family member, spouse or lifetime partner) who has lived in the unit continuously since before July 1, 1971. Rent stabilization generally applies to buildings of six or more units built between February 1, 1947 and December 31, 1973, and to those units that have exited from the rent-control program. Units that are rent-controlled face more significant limits on the ways that they may exit the program than do units that are rent-stabilized. Units also enter rent stabilization under more varied circumstances. For example, as Table B shows, approximately 8 percent of the city’s stabilized units (and nearly all stabilized units in buildings constructed after 1974) were voluntarily subjected to rent stabilization by their owners in exchange for tax incentives from the city. James and Jeanne Harmon’s Upper West Side brownstone contains three involuntarily rentstabilized units. Involuntarily stabilized units, representing 92 percent of the stabilized stock, are regulated based on a “housing emergency” declared by the city in 1974 and renewed every three years since. Under New York State’s Rent Stabilization Law (RSL), the city may declare a housing emergency whenever the city’s rental vacancy rate drops below five percent. Understanding the effects of rent regulation on tenants in New York City requires attention to differences across neighborhoods and over time. The Furman Center has compiled the data below to better inform discussions about rent stabilization. Table C shows that in 1981, 63 percent of rental units were subject to rent stabilization or rent control. Over the past 30 years, there has been a net loss of about 231,000 regulated units as more units exited the program than entered through tax incentive programs. Table B: Rent-Regulated Units, 2011 Includes both Rent-Stabilized and Rent-Controlled Units Regulated RentShare of Regulated Total Rental Units Units % Voluntary 1,025,214 47.2% 8.0% New York City Bronx 231,754 59.7% 13.3% Brooklyn 306,374 44.3% 4.6% Manhattan 284,089 48.4% 6.9% Queens 194,536 43.3% 8.7% 8,461 14.8% 8.4% Core Manhattan 166,961 81.6% 1.9% NYC (not-core Manhattan) 858,254 43.6% 9.2% Staten Island Neighborhoods With the Most Regulated Units Washington Heights/Inwood 56,173 86.7% 0.3% Kingsbridge Heights/Moshulu 40,174 91.5% 1.4% Highbridge/South Concourse 37,385 83.0% 6.0% Upper East Side 35,651 44.4% 4.2% Astoria 34,018 53.0% 8.3% Flatbush 33,077 75.3% 0.7% University Heights/Fordham 31,578 75.7% 3.8% South Crown Heights 30,942 80.8% 0.9% Upper West Side 30,420 42.9% 15.7% Lower East Side/Chinatown 30,351 48.3% 5.6% Table C: Housing Stock in New York City, 1981 - 2011 Includes both Occupied and Vacant Available Units Total Housing Units 1981 1991 2002 2011 2,730,789 2,789,804 3,081,772 3,187,574 Owner Units 754,745 858,108 997,003 1,014,940 Rental Units 1,976,044 1,931,696 2,084,769 2,172,634 1,238,387 1,134,995 1,101,720 1,025,214 Rent-Stabilized 952,832 1,010,584 1,042,397 986,840 Rent-Controlled 285,555 124,411 59,324 38,374 Public Housing 166,061 174,253 178,075 185,534 Market Rate and Other Rental Units* 571,596 622,448 804,973 961,886 62.7% 58.8% 52.8% 47.2% Rent-Regulated Share Regulated *Market Rate and Other Rental Units includes Market Rate, Mitchell-Lama, In Rem, and other subsidized housing units 2 Table D: Income and Rent of Tenants in Market Rate and Rent-Regulated Units, 2011 Includes both Rent-Stabilized and Rent-Controlled Units Median Income Median Rent % Rent Burdened (rent >30% of income) Market RentRate Stabilized 55.7% 58.0% New York City Market Rate $ 52,260 RentStabilized $ 36,600 Market Rate $ 1,550 RentStabilized $ 1,160 Bronx $ 35,800 $ 26,400 $ 1,340 $ 1,066 65.9% 66.8% Brooklyn $ 43,200 $ 35,000 $ 1,350 $ 1,121 58.4% 58.9% Manhattan $ 100,000 $ 49,200 $ 2,625 $ 1,295 46.7% 51.5% Queens $ 50,000 $ 40,000 $ 1,410 $ 1,230 55.7% 56.3% Staten Island $ 39,680 $ 45,000 $ 1,300 $ 1,110 58.4% 46.0% Core Manhattan $ 110,000 $ 57,780 $ 2,725 $ 1,480 45.7% 49.8% NYC (not-core Manhattan) $ $ 34,112 $ 1,385 $ 1,132 58.2% 59.6% 44,320 Neighborhoods With the Most Regulated Units Washington Heights/Inwood $ 55,000 $ 38,800 $ 2,065 $ 1,150 71.5% 56.8% Kingsbridge Heights/Moshulu $ 30,000 $ 26,670 $ 1,025 $ 1,100 57.1% 71.1% Highbridge/South Concourse $ 25,000 $ 27,000 $ 1,306 $ 1,026 59.5% 66.6% Upper East Side $ 106,000 $ 55,000 $ 2,850 $ 1,585 46.8% 59.1% Astoria $ 52,000 $ 50,000 $ 1,439 $ 1,340 53.8% 46.2% Flatbush $ 50,000 $ 38,000 $ 1,320 $ 1,175 47.8% 59.7% University Heights/Fordham $ 19,000 $ 20,364 $ 1,380 $ 1,044 66.7% 69.9% South Crown Heights $ 39,000 $ 40,000 $ 1,170 $ 1,040 59.3% 49.0% Upper West Side $ 120,000 $ 50,300 $ 2,800 $ 1,450 42.0% 46.4% Lower East Side/Chinatown $ 110,000 $ 43,950 $ 2,680 $ 1,205 35.3% 51.0% Table D compares the median income, median rent, and share of tenants who are rent burdened for market-rate renters versus stabilized renters. There is no income test for tenants seeking to rent a stabilized apartment, so some people who enjoy the benefits of rent stabilization are not low-income households. Across the city, however, stabilized units are home to lower income households than market-rate units. The average difference in incomes across the two groups ranges from just over $8,000 in Brooklyn to $50,000 in Manhattan. Part of the income difference likely stems from the fact that rent-stabilized units have more householders over 65 years old than market-rate units. Table E shows that over 23 percent of rentstabilized households are led by a senior, compared to 7 percent of market-rate households. The large gap in incomes in Manhattan is driven primarily by the very high incomes of market-rate renters in Manhattan, not by low incomes of rentstabilized households. Indeed, the median income of stabilized rental households in Manhattan below 96th Street (Core Manhattan) is higher than the median income of market-rate tenants in all but eight neighborhoods outside of the core of Manhattan. 3 Differences in contract rents are also much more pronounced in Manhattan than in the outer boroughs, with stabilized rents about $1,245 per month lower than market-rate rents in core Manhattan, but only $250 lower than market-rate rents in Upper Manhattan and the outer boroughs. Some of this gap between stabilized and market rents is likely due to the fact that stabilized units tend to be older and smaller (Table E) than marketrate units. Some of the gap also may be related to the fact that in general, rents are lower for tenants who have been in a unit for many years than for recent movers, and rent-stabilized tenants on average tend to have been living in their units for about twice as long as market rate tenants. regulated apartments generally have lower incomes; however, given the fact that the share of rentburdened households in rent-regulated housing is close to the share of market-rate tenants who are rent-burdened suggests that rent regulation may be easing rent burdens for these lower income households. Table E also compares the length of tenure for households living in rent-stabilized and market-rate rental units. About 23 percent of households in stabilized units have lived in their unit for 20 years or more, compared with only 7 percent of households living in market-rate units. This difference is especially pronounced in Manhattan below 96th Street, where 35 percent of stabilized households have lived in the same unit for over 20 years, compared with just 2.7 percent of market-rate households. On average, stabilized tenants have been living in their units for 12 years compared to 6 years for market-rate households. There is little difference citywide in the share of households in market-rate and regulated housing that pay over 30% of their income on rent. In fact, households living in stabilized units are slightly more likely to be rent burdened than those living in market-rate units. The households living in Table E: Characteristics of Market Rate and Rent-Stabilized Units, 2008 Includes both Rent-Stabilized and Rent-Controlled Units Number of Bedrooms Market Rate Number of People per Household RentStabilized Market Rate RentStabilized Share of Households that Moved in More Than 20 Years Ago Share of Householders > 65 Years Old Market Rate RentStabilized Market Rate RentStabilized New York City 1.8 1.4 2.6 2.3 7.9% 17.4% 7.1% 23.1% Bronx 2.0 1.5 2.8 2.6 10.9% 13.0% 7.1% 16.8% Brooklyn 1.9 1.5 2.8 2.4 8.7% 18.2% 9.6% 21.8% Manhattan 1.3 1.2 1.9 1.9 4.9% 19.7% 3.1% 30.4% Queens 2.0 1.3 2.9 2.3 8.2% 18.3% 7.7% 22.1% Staten Island 1.8 1.3 2.5 1.7 10.5% ** 7.6% ** Core Manhattan 1.2 1.0 1.8 1.6 4.9% 22.4% 2.7% 35.2% NYC (not-core Manhattan) 1.9 1.5 2.8 2.4 8.7% 16.4% 8.4% 20.7% ** Insufficient Data 4 Table F: Demographic Characteristics of Tenants Living in Market Rate and Rent-Stabilized Units, 2008 Includes both Rent-Stabilized and Rent-Controlled Units Market Rate White Black Rent-Stabilized Hispanic Asian White Black Hispanic Asian New York City 43.0% 20.2% 22.9% 13.0% 35.3% 22.4% 32.0% 9.3% Bronx 16.0% 36.6% 43.0% ** 9.6% 28.0% 58.8% 3.1% Brooklyn 39.1% 29.8% 20.5% 9.7% 42.1% 33.5% 18.0% 5.8% Manhattan 73.4% 5.9% 8.3% 11.5% 47.6% 14.9% 25.6% 9.6% Queens 26.7% 17.2% 31.6% 23.5% 36.0% 8.9% 32.7% 21.8% Staten Island 55.6% 11.8% 29.0% ** 57.4% 26.5% ** ** Core Manhattan 77.4% 3.1% 6.6% 11.9% 67.8% 6.3% 10.1% 14.1% NYC (not-core Manhattan) 33.2% 25.1% 27.5% 13.3% 28.9% 25.6% 36.3% 8.3% ** Insufficient Data Table F shows the racial and ethnic distribution of households living in rent-stabilized and market-rate rental units. Minority households occupy a greater share of stabilized units than market-rate units. This contrast is especially large in Manhattan, where 52 percent of rent-stabilized households are non-white, as compared to just 27 percent of market-rate rental households. The Furman Center for Real Estate and Urban Policy is a joint research center of the New York University School of Law and the Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service. Since its founding in 1995, the Furman Center has become a leading academic research center dedicated to providing objective academic and empirical research on the legal and public policy issues involving land use, real estate, housing and urban affairs in the United States, with a particular focus on New York City. More information about the Furman Center can be found at www.furmancenter.org. 5