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Steuben County New York
Steuben County · New York State

Steuben County Landlord-Tenant Law

Steuben County — the Southern Tier’s largest county by area, anchored by Corning’s glass industry legacy and Elmira’s corrections and healthcare economy, with Corning Inc. as one of upstate New York’s most consequential private employers

📍 County Seat: Bath
👥 ~95K residents — Southern Tier
⚖️ Steuben County Court — Bath, NY
🔬 Corning Inc. • Corning Museum of Glass • Bath VA • Corning CC

Steuben County Rental Market Overview

Steuben County is the largest county in the Southern Tier by area, a vast landscape of rolling hills, river valleys, and small communities that stretches from the Finger Lakes fringe in the north to the Pennsylvania border in the south. With a population of approximately 95,000, the county is anchored by two communities with very different characters: the city of Corning, home to Corning Incorporated — one of the most consequential specialty glass and materials science companies in the world — and the Corning Museum of Glass, which draws hundreds of thousands of visitors annually to one of the finest scientific and artistic museum collections in the country; and the city of Hornell, a small railroad and manufacturing community in the county’s western reaches. The county seat of Bath, a village of approximately 6,000, serves primarily governmental and Veterans Affairs functions as the site of a major VA Medical Center.

Corning Incorporated’s presence in Steuben County is the single most defining economic fact of the local rental market. The company employs thousands of scientists, engineers, technicians, and manufacturing workers at its global headquarters and manufacturing campus in Corning, and its ongoing role as a global leader in specialty glass, optical fiber, and advanced materials means that its workforce consistently includes highly educated technical professionals who command above-average incomes and who represent one of the most reliable and financially capable tenant segments available in upstate New York. The Bath VA Medical Center, Corning Community College, and the broader healthcare sector add additional layers to a market that is more economically diverse than most Southern Tier counties. New York State Real Property Law Article 7 governs all residential tenancies. The Good Cause Eviction Law (2024) applies to covered buildings throughout the county.

📊 Quick Stats

County Seat Bath
Population ~95,000
Major Communities Corning, Hornell, Bath, Painted Post, Hammondsport
Top Employers Corning Inc., Bath VA Medical Center, Steuben County govt, Corning Community College, Arnot Ogden (Chemung)
Median Rent (1BR) ~$750–$1,050/mo; Corning corridor higher
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 Steuben County Court — Bath, NY

Steuben 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.
Corning Inc. Workforce Corning Incorporated employs thousands of scientists, engineers, and technicians at its global headquarters in Corning. This professional workforce represents one of upstate New York’s most financially capable and stable tenant segments outside the NYC metro. Income is W-2 verifiable from a major publicly traded corporation. Relocated employees from other Corning facilities or from outside the region represent an active short- to medium-term rental segment. Market actively to this segment in the Corning-Painted Post corridor.
Bath VA Medical Center The Bath VA Medical Center is a major federal healthcare employer. Federal civilian employees have the employment stability and verifiable income of government workers. Veterans residing in Bath for VA-affiliated care may also seek residential housing. Standard federal employment income verification applies.
Good Cause Eviction Law (2024) Applies to covered buildings. Owner-occupied buildings with fewer than 4 units generally exempt. Verify coverage before any non-renewal action. For Corning corridor properties, where rents have been modest but Corning Inc.’s growth creates upward pressure, Good Cause may limit how quickly rents can be brought to market for covered long-term tenants.
Corning Museum of Glass & Tourism The Corning Museum of Glass draws 400,000+ visitors annually and employs museum and hospitality staff. Tourism-adjacent workers have income patterns that vary seasonally. Verify annual income for any 12-month lease with museum or hospitality employees.
Chemung River Flood History Hurricane Agnes (1972) caused catastrophic flooding throughout the Chemung River watershed, affecting Corning, Painted Post, and surrounding communities. The flood risk in FEMA-designated zones along the Chemung requires written disclosure per RPP § 231-B before any new residential lease for flood-prone properties. Verify FEMA flood zone status for any riverside property.
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.
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.

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📝 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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🏘️ Communities & Screening Tips

Corning / Painted Post (Corning Inc. corridor): Premium tenant segment. Corning engineers and scientists with strong W-2 incomes from a globally recognized corporation. Relocated employees are an active, financially strong rental segment. Standard corporate W-2 verification. Flood zone check required for Chemung River proximity properties (RPP § 231-B).

Bath (VA Medical Center): Federal civilian healthcare employees with stable government incomes. Veterans seeking housing near the VA may need accessible units. Standard federal employment verification. Good Cause applies to covered buildings throughout Bath.

Hornell / western Steuben: More conventional small-city working-class market. Healthcare workers from Hornell area facilities, county government employees, and longtime residents. Older housing stock — thorough move-in documentation essential.

Hammondsport / Keuka Lake: Finger Lakes wine trail and tourism community. Seasonal income patterns for winery workers. Verify annual income across all 12 months. Short-term rental competition may affect year-round supply near the lake.

Steuben County Landlords

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Steuben County Landlord-Tenant Law: Corning Inc., Glass Science, and the Southern Tier’s Industrial Anchor

Steuben County’s rental market is defined above all else by a single corporate presence that is, for a county of 95,000 people in the Southern Tier, remarkable in its scale and economic significance. Corning Incorporated has been based in the city of Corning since 1875, and over the course of 150 years it has built itself from a regional glass manufacturer into one of the world’s leading specialty materials science companies — the company whose optical fiber technology made the modern internet physically possible, whose pharmaceutical glass containers help deliver vaccines and medications to billions of people, whose specialty glass now covers the screens of most smartphones manufactured globally, and whose advanced ceramic and glass products appear in automotive catalytic converters, semiconductor manufacturing, and countless other applications that define contemporary technology. When you understand that this company — publicly traded, globally recognized, with thousands of employees and multiple research facilities — has its headquarters and primary manufacturing campus in a city of 11,000 people on the Chemung River in Steuben County, you begin to understand why the Corning corridor rental market behaves differently from the rest of the Southern Tier.

New York State Real Property Law Article 7 governs every residential tenancy in Steuben County. The one-month security deposit cap of RPP § 238-A, the $20 application fee limit, the 5-day grace period before any late fee, and the cap on those fees at the lesser of $50 or 5% of monthly rent apply uniformly throughout the county. The tiered notice requirements of RPP § 226-C require 30, 60, or 90 days’ written notice for any rent increase of 5% or more or any non-renewal, based on total tenancy length. The warranty of habitability under RPP § 235-B is implied in every lease. These rules apply in the Victorian neighborhoods of Corning city, the working-class streets of Hornell, the wine trail communities around Hammondsport, and the rural farmsteads of the county’s southern reaches with identical force and without exception.

Corning Inc. and the Professional Tenant Premium

Corning Incorporated’s workforce in Steuben County spans a wide range of roles, from highly credentialed research scientists with PhDs and decades of specialized expertise to production technicians, quality engineers, and manufacturing process workers who are skilled but less formally credentialed. What they share is employment at a company with one of the more stable corporate employment profiles in the upstate New York economy — a company that, despite the cyclical pressures that affect any industrial manufacturer, has maintained a continuous presence in Corning through economic downturns, market shifts, and competitive challenges that have eliminated many comparable manufacturing employers from the Southern Tier landscape.

For landlords in the Corning-Painted Post corridor, the Corning Inc. workforce represents a premium tenant segment that rewards the investment in well-maintained, professionally presented housing. Income verification is straightforward: W-2 income from a major publicly traded corporation is easily documented through pay stubs and employment confirmation. The company periodically relocates employees from its other facilities in the US and abroad, and newly arrived relocated employees need housing quickly and have strong financial profiles — a segment that parallels the GlobalFoundries relocated worker dynamic in Saratoga County. Building relationships with Corning’s human resources department or relocation services, where such relationships are possible, can provide a consistent source of highly qualified applicants when units become available.

The Chemung River Flood History and Disclosure Obligations

Hurricane Agnes struck Steuben County in June 1972 with what remains one of the worst flood events in the county’s recorded history. The Chemung River, which runs through Corning, Painted Post, and the county’s central corridor, rose to catastrophic levels that inundated large sections of Corning city and the surrounding communities, causing billions of dollars in damage (in 1972 dollars) and fundamentally reshaping the region’s approach to flood risk management. Significant flood-control infrastructure was built in the aftermath, including the channel modifications and levee system that now protects central Corning, but FEMA flood zone designations remain in place for properties along the Chemung and its tributaries that retain meaningful flood risk.

New York Real Property Law § 231-B requires landlords to disclose known flood risk in writing before executing any new residential lease for properties in or near flood-prone areas. For any Steuben County property near the Chemung River, Canisteo River, or other watercourses with documented flood histories, landlords must verify FEMA flood zone status and provide the required written disclosure before signing any lease. The consequences of non-disclosure are the same here as in Schoharie County and Broome County: a tenant who was not properly disclosed the flood risk may be entitled to rescind the lease and recover all rent paid if the property subsequently floods. In a county with Agnes’s documented history, the disclosure obligation is not merely a technicality — it is a genuine legal compliance requirement with meaningful financial consequences for non-compliance.

Bath, Hornell, and the Rest of the County

Bath, the county seat, is a community whose character is shaped significantly by the Bath VA Medical Center — a major federal healthcare facility that provides a wide range of medical and psychiatric services to veterans across the Southern Tier region. The VA employs federal civilian healthcare workers whose incomes and employment stability are among the most reliable available in Bath’s otherwise modest market. Veterans receiving extended care at the Bath VA may also seek residential housing in the community, and landlords with accessible or veteran-appropriate units who build connections with VA social services and housing support staff may find a reliable referral source for this segment.

Hornell, in the county’s western reaches, is a smaller city with a railroad heritage — it was once a significant maintenance facility on the Erie Railroad and later remained important to various railroad successor companies. Today Hornell’s economy is more conventionally Southern Tier in character: healthcare employment at St. James Mercy Hospital, county government, and a working-class residential population whose economic opportunities have diminished from the railroad era’s peak. The rental market in Hornell is affordable, conventional, and thin, with older housing stock requiring the proactive maintenance that characterizes every upstate post-industrial small city in this guide.

Hammondsport, at the southern tip of Keuka Lake, is the county’s Finger Lakes wine trail community — a small village with a winery and aviation heritage (Glenn Curtiss, pioneer of US aviation, was born here) that draws visitors throughout the warmer months. Winery workers, lake tourism employees, and the county’s small professional class of attorneys, accountants, and service business owners round out the rental market in this southern Finger Lakes corner of the county. The Good Cause Eviction Law applies to covered buildings throughout Steuben County; in a county with Corning Inc.’s corporate presence creating upward rent pressure in the Corning corridor, Good Cause’s threshold for presumptively unreasonable increases is more likely to be triggered in the company’s immediate geographic orbit than in the more stable rural and small-city markets elsewhere in the county.

Rural Steuben County and the Good Cause Framework

Beyond the Corning corridor and the county’s secondary population centers, Steuben County is a vast rural landscape of dairy farms, timber operations, and small agricultural communities spread across the steep-sided valleys of the Southern Tier. Private wells and septic systems are standard throughout the rural county. Oil and propane heat are common, and lease language should clearly allocate fuel delivery responsibility between landlord and tenant to avoid the kind of ambiguity that turns a cold January into a legal dispute about who was supposed to order the oil. The warranty of habitability requires adequate heat throughout the tenancy regardless of how the fuel cost is allocated; a landlord who provides heating equipment but leaves fuel procurement to the tenant must still ensure that the tenant actually has heat, and the practical reality of rural Southern Tier winters means that a fuel-less furnace in February is a habitability failure regardless of the contractual language.

The Good Cause Eviction Law’s owner-occupancy exemption is likely to apply to a significant portion of Steuben County’s rural rental stock, given the prevalence of small owner-occupied buildings throughout the county. For covered buildings, the procedural requirements — stated grounds for non-renewal, notices served on time and in correct form, rent increases above the threshold supported by documented justification — apply with the same completeness in rural Steuben County as in the Corning city neighborhoods where market appreciation is most visible. The Good Cause rent increase threshold itself is less likely to be triggered in the county’s rural and small-city markets than in the Corning Inc. orbit, where the company’s economic gravity creates upward rent pressure that does not reach the county’s southern farming communities. But compliance with the procedural notice requirements has no such geographic variation: every non-renewal in a covered building anywhere in Steuben County requires a stated recognized legal reason, and every rent increase of 5% or more requires the correct tiered notice under RPP § 226-C.

Steuben County is, in the summary of this guide, one of the most economically distinctive rural upstate counties by virtue of Corning Inc.’s presence — a company whose global scale and technological leadership would seem incongruous with a city of 11,000 people on a Southern Tier river if it were not so thoroughly a part of the community’s identity. Landlords who understand and market to Corning’s professional workforce, who maintain flood zone awareness for Chemung River properties, and who manage the county’s more conventional working-class and rural markets with the proactive maintenance and fair pricing that thin markets require are positioned to operate effectively across the county’s full geographic and economic range.

This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Steuben 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. Flood risk disclosure required per RPP § 231-B for Chemung River and other flood-prone properties. Notice requirements: 30/60/90 days based on tenancy length. Consult a licensed New York attorney before taking any action. Last updated: March 2026.

🗺️ Neighboring Counties
Chemung County → Schuyler County → Yates County →
Livingston County → Allegany County →
⚠️ Legal Disclaimer: This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Steuben 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. Flood risk disclosure required per RPP § 231-B for Chemung River corridor properties. 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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