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Cortland County New York
Cortland County · New York State

Cortland County Landlord-Tenant Law

Cortland County — a Central New York college county anchored by SUNY Cortland, with a rental market almost entirely shaped by the academic calendar and student demand

📍 County Seat: City of Cortland
👥 ~47K residents — Central NY
⚖️ Cortland County Court — Cortland, NY
🎓 SUNY Cortland • 7,000+ students

Cortland County Rental Market Overview

Cortland County sits at the geographic center of New York State, a compact Central New York county whose economic identity is almost entirely defined by one institution: SUNY Cortland. With approximately 7,000 students on a residential campus in the city of Cortland, the State University of New York at Cortland is not merely the county’s largest employer — it is the engine of virtually the entire rental market. The city of Cortland, a working-class Central New York city of roughly 18,000, has a housing stock that has been substantially oriented toward student rental housing for decades, and the rhythms of the academic calendar — August move-ins, May move-outs, the surge of applications each spring and the scramble for off-campus housing — define the landlord-tenant experience in Cortland County more completely than in almost any comparable upstate market.

Outside the student market, Cortland County has a conventional rental population drawn from healthcare workers at Guthrie Cortland Medical Center, county government employees, and long-term residents who have lived in the region for generations. Rents are among the most affordable in Central New York for conventional units outside the student corridor. New York State Real Property Law Article 7 governs all residential tenancies. There is no local rent stabilization. The Good Cause Eviction Law (2024) applies to covered buildings throughout the county.

📊 Quick Stats

County Seat City of Cortland
Population ~47,000
Major Communities Cortland, Homer, McGraw, Marathon
Top Employers SUNY Cortland, Guthrie Cortland Medical Center, Cortland County govt
Median Rent (1BR) ~$750–$1,050/mo; student-driven market
Rent Control None
Good Cause Eviction Applies to covered buildings (2024)
Security Deposit Cap 1 month’s rent (RPP § 238-A)
Application Fee Cap Lesser of $20 or actual background check cost
Late Fee Cap Lesser of $50 or 5% monthly rent; 5-day grace

⚡ Eviction At-a-Glance

Nonpayment of Rent 14-Day Rent Demand (RPAPL § 711)
Lease Violation (Curable) 10-Day Notice to Cure; 30-Day Termination
Month-to-Month (<1 year) 30-Day Written Notice (RPP § 232-A)
Month-to-Month (1–2 years) 60-Day Written Notice (RPP § 226-C)
Month-to-Month (>2 years) 90-Day Written Notice (RPP § 226-C)
Rent Increase ≥5% Same tiered 30/60/90-day notice required
Good Cause Eviction Applies to covered buildings — must state reason
Security Deposit Return 14 days with itemized statement
Court Filing Cortland County Court — Cortland, NY

Cortland County — State Law Highlights & Local Notes

Topic Rule / Notes
Security Deposit (RPP § 238-A) Maximum 1 month’s rent. No move-in fees or administrative charges. Must be held in a NY banking institution. Return within 14 days of vacancy with itemized statement. Student tenancies generate the highest security deposit dispute rate — move-in documentation is critical.
SUNY Cortland Student Market SUNY Cortland enrolls approximately 7,000 students, the vast majority of whom live off-campus after freshman year. This creates intense rental demand concentrated in Cortland’s residential neighborhoods. Leases run August–August. Applications peak in spring. Parental guarantors are standard for undergraduates without independent income. A well-drafted written guaranty agreement is essential.
Good Cause Eviction Law (2024) Applies to covered buildings. Owner-occupied buildings with fewer than 4 units are generally exempt. For covered buildings, every non-renewal must state a legally recognized reason. Rent increases exceeding the lower of 10% or 5%+CPI are presumptively unreasonable.
August Turnover Planning The simultaneous move-out of thousands of students in May and move-in of new students in August creates a compressed turnover window. Plan maintenance, cleaning, and any repairs in the May–August gap. Contractors in Cortland are heavily booked during this period — schedule work early. A unit not ready for August occupancy loses an entire academic year of revenue.
Warranty of Habitability (RPP § 235-B) Implied in every lease. Central NY winters require reliable heating. Student housing sees intensive use — systems wear faster than in non-student rentals. Annual inspections of heating, plumbing, and electrical are essential.
Notice Requirements (RPP § 226-C) 30/60/90-day tiers based on total tenancy length apply to any rent increase of 5% or more and to any non-renewal. For student tenants on August–August leases, calculate notice deadlines carefully to ensure proper timing relative to the academic calendar.
Domestic Violence (RPP § 227-C) DV survivors may terminate lease with documentation. No penalty or fee. Landlord must keep use of this provision confidential.

Last verified: March 2026 · Source: NY Real Property Law Article 7

🏛️ Courthouse Finder

🏛️ Courthouse Information and Locations for New York

💵 Cost Snapshot

💰 Eviction Costs: New York
Filing Fee 45-75
Total Est. Range $300-$1,000+
Service: — Writ: —

New York State Law Framework

⚡ Quick Overview

14
Days Notice (Nonpayment)
30-90
Days Notice (Violation)
60-120
Avg Total Days
$45-75
Filing Fee (Approx)

💰 Nonpayment of Rent

Notice Type 14-Day Written Rent Demand
Notice Period 14 days
Tenant Can Cure? Yes - tenant can pay full rent owed at any time before execution of warrant of eviction
Days to Hearing 10-17 days
Days to Writ 14 days
Total Estimated Timeline 60-120 days
Total Estimated Cost $300-$1,000+
⚠️ Watch Out

Extremely tenant-friendly. HSTPA (2019) requires 14-day written rent demand (no oral demands). Good Cause Eviction Law (2024) requires valid reason to evict or not renew in covered units. Rent demand must include Good Cause notice. Tenant can pay all rent owed at any time before warrant execution to dismiss case. Late fees capped at lesser of $50 or 5% of rent. Hardship stay up to 1 year available.

Underground Landlord

📝 New York Eviction Process (Overview)

  1. Serve the required notice based on the eviction reason (nonpayment or lease violation).
  2. Wait for the notice period to expire. If tenant cures the issue (where allowed), the process stops.
  3. File an eviction case with the Housing Court (NYC) / City/Town/Village Court (outside NYC). Pay the filing fee (~$45-75).
  4. Tenant is served with a summons and has the opportunity to respond.
  5. Attend the court hearing and present your case.
  6. If you prevail, obtain a writ of possession from the court.
  7. Law enforcement executes the writ and removes the tenant if necessary.
⚠️ Disclaimer: This page provides general information about New York eviction laws and does not constitute legal advice. Eviction procedures can vary by county and may change over time. Local jurisdictions may have additional requirements or tenant protections. For specific legal guidance, consult a qualified New York attorney or local legal aid organization.
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🔍 Reduce Your Risk Before Signing a Lease: New York landlords who screen tenants carefully before signing a lease significantly reduce their risk of ending up in eviction court. Understanding tenant screening in New York — including background checks, credit history, income verification, and rental references — is one of the most cost-effective steps you can take to protect your rental property. Before you ever need New York's eviction process, proper tenant screening can help you identify red flags early and avoid problem tenancies altogether.
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📋 Notice Period Calculator

Select your state, eviction reason, and the date you plan to serve notice. We'll calculate your earliest filing date and key milestones.

⚠️ Disclaimer: These calculations are estimates based on state statutes and typical court timelines. Actual results vary by county, court backlog, and case specifics. Always verify current requirements with your local courthouse. This is not legal advice.
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🏘️ Communities & Screening Tips

SUNY Cortland area (city of Cortland): The dominant rental market. Near-universal August turnover. Require written parental guarantors for all undergraduates. Move-in documentation is non-negotiable — photograph everything before handing over keys. Security deposit disputes are the most common landlord-tenant issue in the county.

Graduate students & faculty: A distinct, more stable segment with professional or academic income. Prefer longer tenancies, maintain properties more carefully, and do not follow the August-August cycle as rigidly. Market specifically to this group for better tenancy stability.

Homer & suburban Cortland County: More conventional market outside the student corridor. Healthcare workers from Guthrie Cortland, county government employees, and long-term residents. Standard income and credit screening. Lower turnover than student market.

Sports-related demand: SUNY Cortland is well-known for its physical education and athletics programs. Student athletes and PE majors are a consistent segment of the off-campus rental demand. Same screening standards apply.

Cortland County Landlords

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Cortland County Landlord-Tenant Law: Managing Rentals in a SUNY College Town

Cortland County is among the purest examples of a college-town rental market in New York State. Unlike Albany, which has multiple universities alongside a large government and healthcare economy, or Broome County, where Binghamton University coexists with a significant non-student market, Cortland County’s rental market is comprehensively dominated by SUNY Cortland. The university’s approximately 7,000 students — most of whom live off campus after their first year — represent a demand signal that shapes virtually every aspect of the Cortland rental market: the timing of leases, the configuration of units, the maintenance calendar, the security deposit disputes, and the Good Cause Eviction Law considerations that affect non-renewal decisions. Understanding how to operate a rental property in Cortland County means understanding how to operate in a student market, because in Cortland, that is largely what the rental market is.

New York State Real Property Law Article 7 governs every residential tenancy in Cortland County. The one-month security deposit cap of RPP § 238-A applies to every student tenancy regardless of the number of occupants or the landlord’s prior practice. The $20 application fee cap applies to every application. The 5-day grace period before any late fee and the cap on that fee at the lesser of $50 or 5% of monthly rent apply regardless of any lease language to the contrary. 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. For student landlords who have operated informally for years with verbal understandings and handshake lease arrangements, the existence of these mandatory statutory rules — which cannot be contracted around — is the most important legal reality to internalize.

The August Turnover Window

The defining logistical reality of Cortland County landlording is the August turnover window. SUNY Cortland’s academic calendar means that the vast majority of off-campus student leases end in late May or early June and new leases begin in late July or early August. This creates a period of perhaps six to ten weeks in which landlords must complete move-out inspections, conduct security deposit accounting, perform whatever repairs and maintenance the unit needs, clean and prepare the unit, and have it ready for the new tenants’ August arrival. The window is short, it is the same for every student-rental landlord in the city simultaneously, and the consequences of missing it are severe: a unit that is not ready for August occupancy loses revenue for an entire academic year, because the next round of incoming students will have already signed elsewhere.

The practical management implication is that maintenance and repair scheduling must be planned in advance rather than reactively. Contractors in Cortland are heavily booked during the May-to-August window; a landlord who waits until June to schedule summer work may find that no contractor is available until August, which eliminates the preparation window entirely. Relationships with local contractors built over time, standing arrangements for annual maintenance services, and a clear pre-established schedule for the summer turnover period are the operational infrastructure that separates well-run Cortland student properties from chaotic ones.

Guarantors, Documentation, and Security Deposit Disputes

Parental guarantors are the standard and expected framework for undergraduate student tenancies in Cortland County. Most undergraduate applicants have no independent income, no rental history, and no credit profile to speak of. The guarantee from a parent or legal guardian who has verifiable income and a credit history is the mechanism that makes student tenancies workable for landlords. A guaranty agreement should be in writing, signed by the guarantor, and should clearly state that the guarantor’s obligation is unconditional — meaning the landlord does not have to exhaust remedies against the student tenant before pursuing the guarantor for unpaid rent or damages. A parent who promises verbally to cover any shortfall has made no legally enforceable commitment. A parent who signs a properly drafted written guaranty has.

Security deposit disputes are the most frequent landlord-tenant legal conflict in Cortland County, and they arise almost exclusively from student tenancies. The move-out process in a student group rental is rarely orderly: multiple roommates depart at different times over several weeks, cleaning responsibilities are poorly coordinated, furniture may be left behind, and the physical condition of the unit at final departure is often significantly worse than at move-in. The legal framework for security deposit disputes in New York is straightforward: the landlord must return the deposit within 14 days of the tenant vacating with an itemized written statement identifying any deductions, or forfeit the right to make those deductions. The factual question in any dispute is whether the claimed damages were caused by the tenant or represent normal wear and tear — and the answer to that question is almost always determined by whoever has better contemporaneous documentation of the unit’s condition.

A thorough, photographed, signed move-in checklist completed before the students take possession is the only reliable protection against security deposit disputes in the Cortland student market. That checklist should document every room, every pre-existing condition, every scratch and scuff and stain, with photographs that are date-stamped and retained in the lease file for the full period during which a dispute could arise. At move-out, the same level of documentation should be completed and compared against the move-in record. The difference between pre-existing conditions and tenant-caused damage, documented carefully, is the difference between winning and losing a security deposit dispute.

Good Cause Eviction and the Student Market

The Good Cause Eviction Law’s interaction with fixed-term student leases in Cortland County deserves careful attention. Student tenancies are typically structured as fixed-term leases with a defined end date rather than month-to-month arrangements. When a fixed-term lease expires and is not renewed, the question of whether Good Cause applies — and whether the landlord must state a reason for not renewing — depends on whether the property is a covered building under the law. The owner-occupancy exemption for buildings with fewer than four units where the owner genuinely resides may apply to some Cortland County landlords who live in their buildings. Buildings constructed after 2009 may be exempt for a period of years. For all other covered buildings, even a student tenancy that simply runs to its fixed end date requires a Good Cause reason if the landlord declines to offer a renewal lease. Consulting counsel to verify coverage status for each property is advisable before making any non-renewal decision in the Cortland student market.

The Conventional Market Outside the Student Corridor

Cortland County has a conventional rental market that operates largely in the shadow of the student market but deserves attention from landlords seeking lower-turnover tenancies. Healthcare workers from Guthrie Cortland Medical Center, county government employees, and long-term working-class Cortland residents form a tenant base that operates on a completely different calendar than the university population. These tenants do not move in August, they do not require parental guarantors, and they do not produce the same pattern of security deposit disputes. They also tend to stay longer — a healthcare worker who finds a well-maintained apartment near the medical center at a fair rent and has no compelling reason to move is a multi-year tenancy waiting to happen.

For landlords who find the intensity of student-market management — the August scramble, the guarantor paperwork, the move-in documentation marathon, the security deposit disputes — to be more than they want to manage, properties in the Homer, McGraw, and suburban Cortland County areas that are not in the student rental corridor offer a genuinely different experience. Rents are modest, acquisition costs are low, and the tenant profiles are stable. The tradeoff is lower gross income per unit than the student market can generate at peak, but the management overhead and legal complexity are also significantly lower. Both market segments exist in Cortland County, and understanding which one a given property serves is the starting point for setting appropriate expectations about the landlord experience.

This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Cortland County landlord-tenant matters are governed by New York Real Property Law Article 7 (RPP §§ 220–238-A) and the Good Cause Eviction 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. 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.

🗺️ Neighboring Counties
Onondaga County → Cayuga County → Tompkins County →
Chenango County → Broome County →
⚠️ Legal Disclaimer: This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Cortland County landlord-tenant matters are governed by New York Real Property Law Article 7 (RPP §§ 220–238-A) and the Good Cause Eviction 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. Notice requirements: 30/60/90 days based on tenancy length. Consult a licensed New York attorney before taking any action. Last updated: March 2026.

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