Broome County Landlord-Tenant Law: Managing Rentals in the Binghamton Market
Broome County occupies a defining position in New York’s Southern Tier — a post-industrial market that has navigated a genuine economic reinvention over the past three decades and emerged as one of the more interesting mid-sized rental markets in upstate New York. The IBM era is long gone, the shoe factories are closed, but Binghamton University has grown into a SUNY flagship that draws students from across the country and the world, UHS Health System anchors healthcare employment throughout the region, and defense contractors including BAE Systems and Lockheed Martin maintain a presence that provides stable manufacturing employment. The result is a rental market that is more diverse in its tenant base than many upstate counties of similar size, and considerably more affordable than almost anywhere in the state.
New York State Real Property Law Article 7 governs every residential tenancy in Broome County. The one-month security deposit cap of RPP § 238-A, the $20 application fee limitation, the 5-day grace period before any late fee may be charged, and the cap on late fees at the lesser of $50 or 5% of monthly rent are baseline requirements that apply to every Broome County landlord without exception. The tiered notice requirements of RPP § 226-C — 30 days for tenants under one year, 60 days for one to two years, 90 days for more than two years — apply to any rent increase of 5% or more and to any non-renewal of a residential tenancy. The warranty of habitability under RPP § 235-B is implied in every lease regardless of the age of the property or the informality of any prior arrangement.
Binghamton University and the Student Rental Market
Binghamton University is the dominant force in the Broome County rental market. With over 18,000 students, a large graduate population, and a research university profile that attracts faculty and professional staff from across the country, BU generates demand that radiates outward from its Vestal campus into surrounding neighborhoods. The areas immediately surrounding the university in Vestal, the West Side and North Side neighborhoods of Binghamton proper, and the villages adjacent to campus all experience the seasonal demand surge and August turnover that define student-market landlording.
Parental guarantors are the norm for undergraduate student applicants, and landlords should treat them as a standard and essential part of the leasing process rather than a special accommodation. A properly drafted written guaranty — unconditional, signed by the guarantor, clearly stating that the landlord need not exhaust remedies against the student before pursuing the guarantor — provides meaningful protection in a market segment where tenants routinely have no independent income or rental history. A verbal assurance from a parent has no legal weight.
Move-in documentation is the other pillar of successful student-market landlording in Broome County. Student group tenancies produce more security deposit disputes than almost any other tenant category in upstate New York. The move-out process in student rentals is often chaotic — multiple roommates departing at different times, disagreements about responsibility for shared spaces, parents who co-signed leases arriving after the fact with strong opinions about charges. A comprehensive, photographed, signed move-in checklist that documents every pre-existing condition before the students take possession is the only reliable defense. That checklist should be retained for the full period during which a dispute could be filed.
Flood Disclosure and River Proximity
Broome County experienced two catastrophic flood events in 2011 — Hurricane Irene in August and Tropical Storm Lee in September — that caused devastating damage to thousands of properties along the Susquehanna and Chenango rivers and their tributaries. Large portions of Binghamton, Johnson City, Endicott, and smaller communities were inundated. The flood history and risk disclosure required by RPP § 231-B before any new residential lease is not a technicality in Broome County — it is a material obligation with real consequences. Properties near either river system, in low-lying areas of the Triple Cities, or in any FEMA-designated Special Flood Hazard Area must be identified and disclosed in writing before any new tenancy begins. A landlord who fails to make this disclosure and whose property subsequently floods faces a tenant with a statutory right to rescind the lease and recover all prepaid rent.
The Good Cause Eviction Law applies throughout Broome County to covered buildings. The owner-occupancy exemption for buildings with fewer than four units where the owner genuinely resides on the premises may apply to a meaningful share of the county’s small-building landlord population, but the exemption requires genuine, continuous owner-occupancy to be valid. For any building that does not clearly fall within an exemption, Good Cause applies and every non-renewal must state a legally recognized reason. Rent increases for covered tenants that exceed the lower of 10% or 5% plus CPI are presumptively unreasonable and subject to challenge. Given Broome County’s affordability — rents that are already modest by any New York State standard — the practical impact of the Good Cause rent increase threshold may be less severe here than in markets where landlords were attempting double-digit annual increases. But the legal obligation to comply applies regardless of the amount of any proposed increase.
The Broader Broome County Tenant Base
Beyond the student market, Broome County has a substantial conventional rental population that deserves equal attention from landlords. UHS Health System, the county’s largest private employer, provides healthcare jobs that generate stable, verifiable income across a wide range of positions from nursing and physician staff to administrative and support roles. BAE Systems and Lockheed Martin maintain defense-related manufacturing operations in the county that provide union-represented, well-compensated employment with strong job security. Screening healthcare workers and defense manufacturer employees for income, rental history, and credit is straightforward — these applicants typically have W-2 income, stable employment histories, and conventional rental backgrounds that make the screening process efficient.
Johnson City and Endicott, the two communities that along with Binghamton form the Triple Cities, have experienced decades of population decline following the departure of the Endicott-Johnson shoe company and the downsizing of IBM. The result is a housing stock that is older, more affordable, and in some cases in need of significant ongoing maintenance investment. For landlords who acquire properties in these communities, the warranty of habitability obligation under RPP § 235-B is not abstract — older heating systems, aging plumbing, and deteriorated structural elements are real maintenance challenges that must be addressed proactively. A reactive approach to maintenance in older Broome County housing stock leads to habitability complaints, code enforcement action, and ultimately rent abatement claims that cost more than the repairs would have.
Source-of-income discrimination is prohibited under New York State Human Rights Law, and Binghamton has a meaningful Housing Choice Voucher population. Landlords who screen out voucher holders — whether by advertising “no Section 8” or by applying different income standards to voucher applicants — are violating state law and expose themselves to complaints and civil penalties. The subsidy portion of a voucher counts as income for screening purposes, and a voucher holder who meets objective income, credit, and rental history thresholds must be considered on the same basis as any other qualified applicant.
This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Broome County landlord-tenant matters are governed by New York Real Property Law Article 7 (RPP §§ 220–238-A), the Good Cause Eviction Law, and other applicable state law. Security deposit cap: 1 month’s rent. Application fee cap: $20. Late fee cap: lesser of $50 or 5% monthly rent; 5-day grace period. Flood disclosure required per RPP § 231-B for flood-prone properties. Notice requirements: 30/60/90 days based on tenancy length. Consult a licensed New York attorney before taking any action involving a Good Cause-covered tenancy. Last updated: March 2026.
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