THE 2019 CHANGES TO NEW YORK’S LANDLORD-TENANT LAW, PART I. Jul 12, 2019. What are the changes? - “Self-help” eviction is a crime. - Starting in October 2019, landlords must give 30, 60, or 90 days’ notice of lease termination or a rent increase of 5% or more, depending on how long the tenant has lived there. The Residential Tenancies Amendment Act 2019 (external link) will: limit tenants’ liability for careless damage in rental properties. Changes to the residential tenancy laws started on 23 March 2020, with amendments to the Residential Tenancies Act 2010 (the Act) and the new Residential Tenancies Regulation 2019 (the new Regulation). The changes improve tenants’ renting experience while ensuring landlords can effectively manage their properties. While we’re still digesting the impact of these changes, here’s a quick overview of just some of the key modifications: Hear designated broker, Jason Clifford, and Heather Pierce, Deputy Director of Government Affairs for the Rental Housing Association of Washington State discuss some of the upcoming changes that will have the most impact on landlords in Washington State. It is believed that the Model Tenancy Act, 2019 will help overhaul the legal framework vis-à-vis rental housing across India and may also give a boost to private participation in this segment. New landlord-tenant law changes go in effect on July 28th, 2019. New tenancy legislation was passed on 30 July 2019 which will affect landlords and tenants in a number of ways. Effectively this ends all payments ‘in connection with the tenancy of housing in England’, unless they come under the list of permitted payments, which includes: The Tenants Fees Act 2019 was passed into law in February 2019, and as a result letting fees were banned in England from June 1 2019, after already being banned in Scotland. The recently passed “Housing Stability and Tenant Protection Act,” has drastically overhauled the fundamentals of landlord-tenant law and practice in the State of New York. - - - - - New Rights in Eviction Court