DOF must provide by November 1st of each year a publicly available report on outstanding
judgment debt resulting from notices of violation issued by various City agencies and returnable
to the Environmental Control Board and subsequently referred for collection during the previous
fiscal year.
Under Local Law 249 of 2017 and Local Law 216 of 2021, the Department of Finance (DOF) is required to notify property owners when real estate instruments are recorded on their properties. The law mandates that DOF provide an annual report to the council and publish the report on DOF's website.
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.
Since 2009, DCAS has coordinated with City agencies to benchmark nearly 3,000
public buildings including libraries, police stations, firehouses, schools, colleges,
courthouses, hospitals, community centers and government offices.
This report presents statistical information for tax year 2000 for the three New York City
business income taxes: the Banking Corporation Tax (BCT), the General Corporation Tax
(GCT), and the Unincorporated Business Tax (UBT).
The Mayor’s housing plan, “Housing New York: A Five-Borough, Ten-Year Plan,” has called
attention to the affordability crisis many New Yorkers face, particularly senior citizens and people
with disabilities
The New York City Rent Freeze program is comprised of the Senior Citizen Rent Increase
Exemption (SCRIE) and the Disability Rent Increase Exemption (DRIE). The program assists lowincome seniors and people with disabilities who reside in rent-regulated apartments or
apartments
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 2019 (June 1, 2018 – May 31, 2019) 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 2020 (June 1, 2019 – May 31, 2020) returns and CRT collections data from Department of Finance records.
Local Law 4 of 2006 requires the New York City Department of Finance (DOF) to report annually to the New
York City Council on the sale of tax liens during the preceding year. This report summarizes tax lien sale
activity for calendar year 2021.
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.
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 2022 (June 1, 2021 – May 31, 2022) returns and CRT collections data from Department of Finance records.
Market value grew in FY 2019, for the eighth straight year. The total City-wide market value of fully and partially taxable property exceeded $1.2 trillion dollars and was about 8.8 percent higher than in FY 2018.
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.
In 2009, the New York State Legislature enacted General Municipal Law Article 5-L, which
authorizes municipalities within New York State to create and administer Property Assessed
Clean Energy (“PACE”) financing programs.
Weigh-in-motion systems violations are issued to vehicle owners whose vehicles are recorded as having axle or gross weights exceeding the existing legal thresholds.
Report summary of the current effective concession awards, date each concession was submitted to the Comptroller for registration, brief description of each concession awarded, method by which concession was awarded, the approximate gross revenues received by the City for each concession of prior FY
Market value growth declined in FY 2010—the first decline since 1995. The total Citywide market value of fully and partially taxable property fell to $795.7 billion, about 1.9
percent lower than FY 2009. Manhattan market value growth remained positive in FY 2010
Since changes in market value are
phased in, previous years’ increases in market value are still being reflected in the current
year’s assessed values. As a result, overall taxable billable assessed value (BAV)
increased 5.8 percent.
Market and assessed values grew at a strong pace in FY 2003. The total Citywide market value
of fully and partially taxable property reached $429.8 billion, a $37.5 billion or 9.6 percent
increase over FY 2002. This increase was largely driven by the strength of residential properties.
As the average tax rate remained at $12.283 per $100 of assessed value, the increase in
the taxable BAV resulted in $1.741.6 million in additional property tax levy for FY2021
Under Local Law 36 of 2023, the New York City Department of Finance (DOF) is required to
report information relating to property tax payment plans to the mayor and speaker of the city
council. Local Law 36 also created a new type of property tax payment plan that reduces the
interest rate.
Market value grew slightly in FY 2012, after two years of decline. The total City-wide
market value of fully and partially taxable property increased to $814.4 billion, about 2.6
percent higher than FY 2011. Market value increased in Manhattan and Queens, was
virtually unchanged in the Bronx
Market and assessed values continued to grow at a strong pace in FY 2008. The total
Citywide market value of fully and partially taxable property reached $795.9 billion, a
$121.8 billion, or 18.1 percent increase over FY 2007. This increase was largely driven
by Class One properties
Market value growth slowed substantially in FY 2009. The total City-wide market value
of fully and partially taxable property reached $811.1 billion, only 1.9 percent higher than
FY 2008. Manhattan and Bronx market value growth remained positive in FY 2009
Market value declined slightly in FY 2011—for the second consecutive year. The total
City-wide market value of fully and partially taxable property fell to $793.7 billion,
about 0.2 percent lower than FY 2010. Manhattan market value growth remained
positive in FY 2011,
Market value grew slightly in FY 2013, for the second straight year. The total City-wide
market value of fully and partially taxable property increased to $838.0 billion, about 2.9
percent higher than FY 2012.
Since changes in market value are
phased in, previous years’ increases in market value are still being reflected in the current
year’s assessed values. As a result, overall taxable billable assessed value (BAV)
increased by 6.3 percent.
Since the average tax rate remained at $12.283 per $100 of assessed value, the increase in
taxable BAV resulted in $1,553.5 million in additional property tax levy for FY 2016.
Market value grew in FY 2017, for the sixth straight year. The total City-wide market
value of fully and partially taxable property exceeded one trillion dollars and was about
9.8 percent higher than FY 2016. Market value increased in all of the boroughs:
Market value grew in FY 2018, for the seventh straight year. The total City-wide market
value of fully and partially taxable property exceeded one trillion dollars and was about
8.0 percent higher than in FY 2017. Market value increased in all of the boroughs:
Market value grew in FY 2019, for the eighth straight year. The total City-wide market
value of fully and partially taxable property exceeded $1.2 trillion dollars and was about
8.8 percent higher than in FY 2018. Market value increased in all of the boroughs:
Market value grew in FY 2020, for the ninth straight year. The total citywide market
value of fully and partially taxable property exceeded $1.3 trillion and was 5.2 percent
higher than in FY 2019. Market value increased in all boroughs:
This report presents statistical information on the New York City General
Corporation Tax (GCT) and Unincorporated Business Tax (UBT). Data
are provided for tax year 1998, the latest year for which complete
information is available. *
Under Local Law 6 of 2022, the New York City Department of Finance (DOF) is required to
report to the mayor and speaker of the city council and post on its website a report on many
aspects of its administration of parking tickets and camera violations by September 30 of each
year.
Annual Report of the New York City Real Property Tax for the fiscal year 2022 shows a market value declined in FY 2022, ending ten consecutive years of growth. The total citywide market value of fully and partially taxable property was still approximately $1.3 trillion.
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).
On January 22, 2015, Mayor Bill de Blasio signed Local Law 11 of 2015. The bill, approved by
the New York City Council at its stated meeting on January 7, 2015, requires the New York City
Department of Finance (DOF) to report annually to the city council on outstanding Environmental
Control Board
Under Local Law 11 of 2015 the New York City Department of Finance (DOF) is required to report annually to the City Council on outstanding Environmental Control Board (ECB)-adjudicated judgments by November 1.
Under Local Law 11 of 2015, the New York City Department of Finance (DOF) is required to report annually to the New York City Council on outstanding Environmental Control Board (ECB)-adjudicated judgments by November 1.
Funds and value of goods donated by organizations or individuals and any conservancy arrangements; with his or her annual report, the Commissioner shall make a statement of the condition of all the gifts, devises and bequests of the previous year.
Funds and value of goods donated by organizations
or individuals and any conservancy arrangements; with his or her annual
report, the Commissioner shall make a statement of the condition of all the
gifts, devises and bequests of the previous year.
This report captures goods and services provided or donated to the Department by non-governmental entities, and does not include the value of services provided to the Department of Parks & Recreation.
This report captures both routine cleaning and specialized repair performed in individual parks as recorded in the Department’s Daily Tasks and AMPS applications. These costs are reported by park.
Under Local Law 249 of 2017 and Local Law 216 of 2021, the Department of Finance (DOF) is required to
notify property owners when real estate instruments are recorded on their properties.
Under Local Law 249 of 2017 and Local Law 216 of 2021, the Department of Finance (DOF) is required to
notify property owners when real estate instruments are recorded on their properties.
Report on numbers of individuals using the Department's notification system for recorded deeds, numbers of properties registered, and also on fraudulent document recording complaints and referrals
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.
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.
New York City provides a variety of programs to further social and economic objectives by mean of targeted tax incentives or benefits which reduce tax liabilities, otherwise referred to as Tax Expenditures.
New York City provides a variety of programs to further social and economic objectives by mean of targeted tax incentives or benefits which reduce tax liabilities, otherwise referred to as Tax Expenditures.
New York City provides a variety of programs to further social and economic objectives by mean of targeted tax incentives or benefits which reduce tax liabilities, otherwise referred to as Tax Expenditures.
New York City provides a variety of programs to further social and economic objectives by mean of targeted tax incentives or benefits which reduce tax liabilities, otherwise referred to as Tax Expenditures.
New York City provides a variety of programs to further social and economic objectives by mean of targeted tax incentives or benefits which reduce tax liabilities, otherwise referred to as Tax Expenditures.
New York City provides a variety of programs to further social and economic objectives by mean of targeted tax incentives or benefits which reduce tax liabilities, otherwise referred to as Tax Expenditures.
New York City provides a variety of programs to further social and economic objectives by mean of targeted tax incentives or benefits which reduce tax liabilities, otherwise referred to as Tax Expenditures.
New York City provides a variety of programs to further social and economic objectives by mean of targeted tax incentives or benefits which reduce tax liabilities, otherwise referred to as Tax Expenditures.
New York City provides a variety of programs to further social and economic objectives by mean of targeted tax incentives or benefits which reduce tax liabilities, otherwise referred to as Tax Expenditures.
New York City provides a variety of programs to further social and economic objectives by mean of targeted tax incentives or benefits which reduce tax liabilities, otherwise referred to as Tax Expenditures.
New York City provides a variety of programs to further social and economic objectives by mean of targeted tax incentives or benefits which reduce tax liabilities, otherwise referred to as Tax Expenditures.
New York City provides a variety of programs to further social and economic objectives by mean of targeted tax incentives or benefits which reduce tax liabilities, otherwise referred to as Tax Expenditures.
New York City provides a variety of programs to further social and economic objectives by mean of targeted tax incentives or benefits which reduce tax liabilities, otherwise referred to as Tax Expenditures.
New York City provides a variety of programs to further social and economic objectives by mean of targeted tax incentives or benefits which reduce tax liabilities, otherwise referred to as Tax Expenditures. Updated june 10 and Taxes per worker appendix
NYC Department of Finance Annual Report on the NYC Property Tax for the fiscal year 2000. This includes summaries of assessments, market values, exemptions, tax levies and rates
Department of Finance’s Annual Report on the New York City Real Property Tax for FY 2001. The report continues to include all the information
and data that have made previous issues an invaluable reference source for City finances.
The Comptroller’s Annual State of the City’s Economy and Finances Report, released each year in December, is designed to provide a grounding for analysis as the City prepares to begin its annual budget process early in the new year.
Contracting is how the City meets many of our goals and provides services to New Yorkers. City agencies contract with vendors to provide meals to home-bound seniors, childcare and afterschool programs for kids, construction projects to build new schools, upgrade our parks, repair our roads.
This memorandum provides modifications to the required methodology for the attribution of interest deductions for taxpayers subject to the Business Corporation Tax (BCT), General Corporation Tax (GCT), Banking Corporation Tax (BTX) or the Unincorporated Business Tax (UBT)
Presentation of the audit report on New York City Health + Hospitals’ Oversight of its certain assisting organizations that furnish financial support for Health + Hospitals through various fundraising activities.
Presentation of the audit of New York City Board of Education Retirement System’s controls over the identification of improper benefit payments to deceased recipients.
Presentation of the audit report of New York City Department of Environmental Protection to verify whether the agency is properly managing the exemption from water and sewer charges granted to property owners and demanding property owners to recertify for the exemption.
The audit found that the Kingsbridge Business Improvement District (BID) provides supplemental services, including sanitation services, holiday lights and seasonal decorations, marketing and special events, and streetscape and beautification.
The objective of this audit was to determine whether the City’s Department of Finance (DOF) has controls in place to ensure that: (1) DOF can readily identify all Service Providers subject to the law’s requirement to collect the 911 surcharge...
This report presents statistical information for tax year 2005 for the three New York City
business income taxes: the Banking Corporation Tax (BCT), the General Corporation Tax
(GCT), and the Unincorporated Business Tax (UBT).
This report presents statistical information for tax year 2006 for the three New York City
business income taxes: the Banking Corporation Tax (BCT), the General Corporation Tax
(GCT), and the Unincorporated Business Tax (UBT).
This report presents statistical information for tax year 2007 for the three New York City
business income taxes: the Banking Corporation Tax (BCT), the General Corporation Tax
(GCT), and the Unincorporated Business Tax (UBT).
This report presents statistical information for tax year 2008 for the three New York City
business income taxes: the Banking Corporation Tax (BCT), the General Corporation Tax
(GCT), and the Unincorporated Business Tax (UBT).
This report presents statistical information for tax year 2009 for the three New York City
business income taxes: the Banking Corporation Tax (BCT), the General Corporation Tax
(GCT), and the Unincorporated Business Tax (UBT).
This report presents statistical information for tax year 2012 for the three New York City
business income taxes: the Banking Corporation Tax (BCT), the General Corporation Tax
(GCT), and the Unincorporated Business Tax (UBT).
This report presents statistical information for Tax Year 2016 for three New York City business
income taxes: the Business Corporation Tax (COR), the General Corporation Tax (GCT), and the
Unincorporated Business Tax (UBT).
This report presents statistical information for tax year 1999 for the three New York City business income taxes: the Banking Corporation Tax (BCT), the General Corporation Tax (GCT), and the Unincorporated Business Tax (UBT).
This report presents statistical information for tax year 2001 for the three New York City business income taxes: the Banking Corporation Tax (BCT), the General Corporation Tax (GCT), and the Unincorporated Business Tax (UBT).
To All Trade Waste Broker Registrants:
All financial statements for the 2023 calendar year must be filed with the Business Integrity Commission (“BIC”) on or before June 30, 2024. The form for the 2023 financial statements is available on the Commission’s website: https://www.nyc.gov/bic.
To All BIC Licensees: All financial statements for the 2023 calendar year must be filed with the Business Integrity Commission (“BIC”) on or before June 30, 2024. The form for the 2023 financial statements is available on the Commission’s website: https://www.nyc.gov/bic.
To All BIC Licensees: All financial statements for the 2023 calendar year must be filed with the Business Integrity Commission (“BIC”) on or before June 30, 2024. The form for the 2023 financial statements is available on the Commission’s website: http://www.nyc.gov/bic.
The commercial rent tax (CRT) is imposed on the rent paid by tenants who occupy or use real property for
commercial purposes in Manhattan south of 96th Street.
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 2018 (June 1, 2017 – May 31, 2018)
returns and CRT collections data from Department of Finance records.
NYC Department of Finance Commissioner Jacques Jiha, Ph.D. Testimony on the FY'20 Preliminary Budget Hearing before the City Council Finance Committee.
Fiscal Year 2023 begins in a period of significant economic uncertainty. There are meaningful signs of continued recovery from the pandemic, with jobs at 96% of pre-pandemic levels, tourism and Broadway rebounding, record numbers of new business applications, and tax revenues coming in...
The City of New York’s Comprehensive Annual Financial Report (CAFR) for Fiscal Year 2018. This
report, shows that The City of New York (City) completed its Fiscal Year with a General
Fund surplus, as determined by Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP), for the 38th consecutive year.
The New York City Department of Finance announced an updated schedule of fines as part of its Stipulated Fine Program. The new schedule of stipulated fines reflects updated information on dismissal rates for adjudicated violations as well as traffic policy goals of the Adams administration.