Washington County Landlord-Tenant Law: Managing Rentals in Rural Eastern New York
Washington County is one of New York’s most genuinely rural counties, a landscape of dairy farms, river valleys, and small historic villages stretching from the Adirondack foothills east to the Vermont border along Lake Champlain. It is not a market that generates headlines or attracts speculative investment, but for the landlord who understands it — who knows that a corrections officer at Great Meadow or a county government employee in Fort Edward is among the most reliable tenants in any upstate market — it offers stable, low-drama rental returns that more competitive urban markets cannot match. The legal framework is entirely provided by New York State Real Property Law Article 7, with no local modifications or enhancements anywhere in the county.
The fee limitations of RPP § 238-A apply throughout Washington County without exception: security deposits are capped at one month’s rent, application fees at $20, and late fees at the lesser of $50 or 5% of monthly rent with a mandatory 5-day grace period. 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, determined by how long the tenant has lived in the unit. The warranty of habitability under RPP § 235-B is implied in every lease. These are the baseline rules and they apply to every Washington County landlord, from a single rented room above a garage in Cambridge to a six-unit building in Hudson Falls.
The Washington County Rental Market: Small Scale, Steady Demand
Washington County’s rental market is small by any measure, but it has structural characteristics that support consistent landlord performance. The county’s largest employers — county government, the corrections system (Great Meadow Correctional Facility in Comstock is a significant employer in the southern part of the county), healthcare, and light manufacturing — provide steady, verifiable wage income to a working population that needs rental housing because the local owner-occupied market, while affordable by New York standards, still requires down payments and credit scores that are out of reach for many households. The result is a tenant base that is primarily long-term, locally rooted, and financially motivated to maintain good standing with a landlord. Turnover in Washington County rentals tends to be lower than in more transient urban markets, which is both an opportunity and a risk: long-term tenancies mean stable income, but they also mean that when a tenancy does go bad, the landlord may be dealing with someone who has established deep roots and knows the legal process well.
The physical character of Washington County’s rental housing stock presents its own set of considerations. The county’s villages — Hudson Falls, Fort Edward, Granville, Whitehall — contain primarily late nineteenth and early twentieth century housing, much of it converted single-family homes and small two- and three-family buildings. This is the kind of housing stock that requires active maintenance management. Heating systems in older village buildings, particularly those with steam or hot water boilers, require annual inspection and servicing. The warranty of habitability under RPP § 235-B makes adequate heating a non-negotiable obligation, and in Washington County’s climate, a heating failure in February is an emergency, not an inconvenience. Landlords who invest in proactive annual maintenance — boiler service, roof inspection before winter, gutter cleaning, pipe insulation in vulnerable locations — consistently outperform those who defer maintenance until a problem forces action.
Rural Properties: Wells, Septic, and the Habitability Standard
A meaningful portion of Washington County’s rental inventory lies outside the village centers, in farmhouses, rural cottages, and converted outbuildings on agricultural properties. These rural rentals introduce maintenance obligations that village landlords do not face: private well water systems and on-site septic systems. Both are subject to the warranty of habitability. A well that produces contaminated water — whether from agricultural runoff, failing septic systems on neighboring properties, or the county’s own legacy of industrial activity near the Hudson River — is a habitability failure that the landlord is obligated to remediate. Annual water quality testing for rural rentals on private wells is not merely a best practice; it is a reasonable interpretation of the warranty of habitability’s requirement that the premises be fit for human habitation. Landlords should retain test results in their property files and provide copies to tenants upon request.
Washington County also has a significant agricultural sector, and some landlords in the county provide housing to farm employees as part of employment arrangements. These tied housing situations — where the tenancy is linked to employment — require careful structuring. Under New York law, even an employee who resides on the property as a condition of employment may have residential tenancy protections that survive the termination of employment, depending on how the housing relationship was documented and structured. Landlords who provide farm worker housing should ensure that the lease or occupancy agreement clearly addresses what happens to the housing relationship if the employment ends, and should consult counsel to ensure the arrangement is structured in a way that preserves the landlord’s ability to recover possession when employment concludes.
Good Cause Eviction in a Small-County Context
The Good Cause Eviction Law, enacted as part of New York’s 2024 state budget, applies throughout Washington County to most residential tenants not covered by rent stabilization. For Washington County’s many small-building landlords — two-family homeowners, three-unit investors, farmhouse rentals — the owner-occupancy exemption for buildings with fewer than four units where the owner genuinely resides on the premises is highly relevant. Many Washington County landlords who live in one unit of a two- or three-family building may qualify for this exemption, but coverage and exemption status should be verified with counsel before serving any non-renewal notice. Assuming exemption without verification is a mistake that creates legal exposure in eviction proceedings.
For landlords whose buildings are covered by Good Cause, the practical impact is most significant around non-renewal decisions. Under Good Cause, a covered tenant cannot be non-renewed without a legally recognized reason. In Washington County’s small-town environment, where landlord-tenant relationships are often personal and long-standing, this requirement adds a layer of formality to what was previously an informal process. Landlords who have relied on informal non-renewal conversations or handshake understandings about tenancy terminations should update their practices to ensure that all non-renewal notices are in writing, state a legally recognized reason, and comply with the applicable notice period under RPP § 226-C.
This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Washington 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. Notice requirements: 30/60/90 days based on tenancy length. Good Cause Eviction Law applies to covered buildings. Consult a licensed New York attorney before taking any action involving a Good Cause-covered tenancy or a farm employee housing arrangement. Last updated: March 2026.
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