This report, mandated by the New York City Charter, identifies and describes tax expenditure programs related to taxes administered by the City and provides tax expenditure estimates based on available data.
Tax Commission 2016 Annual Report. This report contains information about the Tax Commission and its mission, functions, operations and resources, an overview of the agency’s performance, and statistical profiles of its determinations during calendar year 2016.
Overall report on market values by tax class and borough, exemptions, assessed values, home sales, tax delinquency, market values, real property, school tax rates, etc.
Certain City programs are funded by reductions in tax liability and are referred to as “tax expenditures.” This report identifies and describes tax expenditure programs related to taxes administered by the City
and provides tax expenditure estimates based on available data.
This report is submitted as required by Section 168.f of the New York City Charter. The New York City Tax Appeals Tribunal has jurisdiction over petitions filed by taxpayers protesting statutory notices issued by the Department of Finance for all non-property income.
Sixth annual report of the Office of the Taxpayer Advocate (OTA), an office established in 2015 within the Department of Finance (DOF) to assist customers and recommend improvements to the agency’s policies and procedures.
This report provides data on Commercial Rent Tax (CRT) liability at the taxpayer and premises level.
The data sources for this report are taxpayers’ CRT tax year 2021 (June 1, 2020 – May 31, 2021) returns
and CRT collections data from Department of Finance records.
This report provides data on Commercial Rent Tax (CRT) liability at the taxpayer and premises level. The data sources for this report are taxpayers’ CRT tax year 2021 (June 1, 2020 – May 31, 2021) returns and CRT collections data from Department of Finance records.
The seventh annual report of the Office of the Taxpayer Advocate (OTA), an office established in 2015 by the Department of Finance (DOF) to assist customers and recommends improvements to the agency’s policies and procedures.
New York City’s current property tax system is notoriously opaque, unfair, and regressive. For the past four decades, rather than dealing with its structural flaws, New York State has layered on a patchwork of exemptions and abatements to lower tax rates for various owners.
DOF is amending the rules for the SCRIE and DRIE Programs.
These amendments to Chapter 52 were first proposed and published on September 23, 2022. A public hearing was held on October 25, 2022. After receiving and reviewing public comments, DOF has adopted this final rule.
Overall report on market values by tax class and borough, exemptions, assessed values, home sales, tax delinquency, market values, real property, school tax rates, etc.
The total citywide market value of fully and partially taxable property approached $1.4 trillion, about 7.8 percent higher than in FY 2022. Growth was higher in Class Two (9.1 percent) and Class Four (9.7 percent) compared to Class One (6.6 percent) and Class Three (5.4 percent).
This report, mandated by the New York City Charter, identifies and describes tax expenditure programs related to taxes administered by the City and provides tax expenditure estimates based on available data.
This report, mandated by the New York City Charter, identifies and describes tax expenditure programs related to taxes administered by the City and provides tax expenditure estimates based on available data.