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Yates County New York
Yates County · New York State

Yates County Landlord-Tenant Law

Penn Yan — The smallest county in the Finger Lakes, where Keuka Lake wine country, tourism, and a tight year-round rental market define one of New York’s most scenic — and most landlord-friendly — rural counties

📍 County Seat: Penn Yan
👥 ~25K residents — Finger Lakes wine country
⚖️ Yates County Supreme & County Court
🍷 Keuka Lake • Wine tourism • Agriculture

Yates County Rental Market Overview

Yates County is the smallest county in the Finger Lakes region and one of the smallest in New York State by population, home to approximately 25,000 residents in a landscape that encompasses the entirety of Keuka Lake — the only Y-shaped lake in the Finger Lakes chain — along with rolling vineyard hills, apple orchards, and the small but lively village of Penn Yan. The county is geographically compact and economically distinct: it sits at the heart of the Finger Lakes wine country, with more than two dozen wineries operating along Keuka Lake’s shores, and the tourism economy that flows from the wine trail, lakefront recreation, and the region’s natural beauty provides a seasonal economic layer on top of the county’s agricultural and small-business base.

For landlords, Yates County presents a genuinely bifurcated market: a small but stable year-round residential rental market anchored in Penn Yan and the county’s handful of other villages, and a seasonal and short-term rental segment tied to Keuka Lake’s lakefront properties and the wine trail visitor economy. There is no local rent control anywhere in Yates County, no county-level tenant protection ordinance, and no village-level stabilization system. The Good Cause Eviction Law (2024) applies to covered buildings. All residential tenancies are governed by New York State Real Property Law Article 7. As the final county in this series covering all 62 New York counties, Yates represents the completion of a statewide framework that begins at the same baseline — RPL Article 7 — and adapts to the specific economic and geographic character of each community.

📊 Quick Stats

County Seat Penn Yan (village)
Population ~25,000
Major Communities Penn Yan, Dundee, Dundee Village, Benton, Milo, Jerusalem
Top Employers Wine industry, agriculture, Soldiers & Sailors Memorial Hospital, county government, tourism
Median Rent (1BR) ~$750–$1,000/mo year-round; lakefront commands premium
Rent Control None — no local rent stabilization
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 if not cured
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 Required for covered buildings — must state reason
Security Deposit Return 14 days with itemized statement
Court Filing Yates County Court — Penn Yan

Yates 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 permitted. Must be held in a NY banking institution. For buildings with 6+ units, must be interest-bearing. Return within 14 days of vacancy with itemized statement.
Good Cause Eviction Law (2024) Applies to most covered buildings throughout Yates County. Landlords must state a legally recognized reason for non-renewal or eviction. Rent increases exceeding the lower of 10% or 5%+CPI are presumptively unreasonable. The owner-occupancy exemption for buildings with fewer than 4 units where the owner genuinely resides is highly relevant in a county of predominantly small landlords. Verify coverage status before serving any non-renewal notice.
Seasonal & Short-Term Rentals — Keuka Lake Lakefront properties on Keuka Lake are frequently used for short-term vacation rentals. Landlords should confirm whether their specific property is subject to any town-level short-term rental licensing or zoning restrictions — several Finger Lakes towns have adopted or are considering local STR regulations. A genuine transient rental of a furnished property for a week or two may not constitute a residential tenancy under RPL Article 7, but a seasonal rental that extends into months or where the occupant establishes the property as a primary residence can shift to protected tenancy status. Consult counsel before assuming any occupancy is exempt.
Wine Industry & Agricultural Workforce Yates County’s wine industry employs a mix of year-round cellar and vineyard managers and seasonal harvest workers. Year-round wine industry employees tend to have stable but modest incomes. Seasonal harvest workers may seek short-term housing during the late summer and fall crush season — verify income stability and employment duration carefully for applicants with seasonal agricultural work patterns.
Warranty of Habitability (RPP § 235-B) Implied in every residential lease. Yates County winters are cold and rural properties on private well and septic are common. Landlords must maintain heating systems, water supply, and sanitary systems to habitable standards. Annual furnace servicing and water quality testing for rural rentals are minimum preventive standards.
Anti-Retaliation (RPP § 223-B) 6-month rebuttable presumption of retaliation for any adverse action after a tenant complaint to a government authority. Applies to buildings with 3+ units. Proactive maintenance and documented repair records are the most effective protection.
Notice Requirements (RPP § 226-C) 30/60/90-day tiered notices apply to any rent increase of 5% or more and to any non-renewal. The applicable period is determined by how long the tenant has occupied the unit, not the term of the current lease.
Attorneys’ Fees (RPP § 234) If the lease grants the landlord a right to attorneys’ fees, the tenant automatically has a reciprocal right. This cannot be waived by lease language.
Domestic Violence (RPP § 227-C) Survivors may terminate a lease immediately with proper documentation. No penalty or early termination fee may be charged. The landlord must keep the use of this provision confidential.

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

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🏛️ 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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🏘️ Communities & Screening Tips

Penn Yan: The county seat and commercial hub, home to Soldiers & Sailors Memorial Hospital and most of the county’s retail and professional services. Healthcare workers and county employees are the most reliable applicant profiles. Limited rental inventory means low vacancy — screen carefully because a poor tenancy in a small market can be difficult to resolve quickly.

Keuka Lake shoreline: High-value lakefront properties with strong short-term and seasonal rental demand. Year-round residential tenants are fewer. Confirm local STR licensing requirements before operating as a vacation rental. If transitioning a property from STR to year-round residential, be aware that the legal obligations shift significantly.

Dundee & rural communities: Small agricultural villages with very limited rental inventory. Wine industry workers and farm employees are common applicants. Verify income stability — seasonal employment patterns can create off-season payment stress. Source-of-income discrimination is prohibited under New York Human Rights Law; screen on objective criteria only.

Rural properties on private well/septic: Common throughout the county. Confirm water quality and septic functionality before any tenancy begins. Document in writing and retain records of all testing and maintenance.

Yates County Landlords

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Yates County Landlord-Tenant Law: Managing Rentals in the Heart of Finger Lakes Wine Country

Yates County is the smallest county in the Finger Lakes, a compact geography of exceptional natural beauty centered on Keuka Lake and the vineyard hills that surround it. With a population of approximately 25,000 — the smallest of any county in this 62-county series — Yates is a place where everyone knows their neighbors, where the rental market is measured in dozens of available units rather than hundreds, and where a landlord’s reputation in the community matters as much as any legal compliance framework. And yet the legal framework applies here with the same force it applies in Westchester or Kings County: New York State Real Property Law Article 7 governs every residential tenancy in Yates County, the Good Cause Eviction Law applies to covered buildings, and every fee limitation, notice requirement, and habitability obligation is fully in effect regardless of how small the market or how informal the local rental culture may feel.

The baseline rules of RPP § 238-A cap security deposits 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, with the applicable period determined by how long the tenant has occupied the unit. The warranty of habitability under RPP § 235-B is implied in every lease. These rules apply to a studio apartment above a Penn Yan storefront with the same force they apply to a Manhattan high-rise. Yates County landlords who have operated on handshake agreements and informal arrangements for years should understand that these legal obligations have always applied — and that the Good Cause Eviction Law has now added a formal notice requirement to tenancy terminations that did not exist before 2024.

The Penn Yan Year-Round Market

Penn Yan is Yates County’s only significant year-round rental market, and it is modest by any measure — a village of approximately 5,000 people serving as the commercial, healthcare, and governmental hub for the surrounding county. Soldiers & Sailors Memorial Hospital is the county’s largest employer and the anchor of its healthcare economy, employing nurses, technicians, and support staff who need stable year-round housing within reasonable distance of the facility. County government, local retail and services, and the wine industry’s year-round operational staff round out the employer base. For landlords with Penn Yan properties, the healthcare and county government workforce represents the most reliable tenant pool available: steady employment, verifiable income, and a professional stake in maintaining good rental standing in a community where housing options are limited and reputation matters.

The housing stock in Penn Yan is characteristic of small upstate New York village centers: older single-family homes converted to two- and three-unit rentals, small apartment buildings of mid-twentieth century vintage, and some commercial-over-residential mixed-use buildings in the village core. This older stock brings familiar maintenance demands. Heating system maintenance is the most critical habitability obligation in any Finger Lakes winter — cold temperatures, occasional ice storms, and the practical reality that alternative housing options in the county are extremely limited mean that a heating failure is not merely an inconvenience but a genuine hardship for which the landlord bears full legal responsibility under RPP § 235-B. Annual professional service of every furnace and boiler, documented and retained in the property file, is the minimum standard. Landlords who have deferred this investment are not saving money; they are accumulating liability.

Keuka Lake and the Seasonal Rental Question

Keuka Lake is the defining geographic feature of Yates County and the engine of its tourism economy. The lake’s Y-shaped shoreline, surrounded by vineyards and rolling hills, draws visitors throughout the warmer months for boating, swimming, wine trail touring, and general lakefront recreation. Many lakefront and lake-view properties in Yates County are operated as short-term vacation rentals, particularly during the summer season from Memorial Day through Labor Day and during fall foliage and harvest season. This creates a legal classification question that Yates County landlords must navigate carefully: when does a vacation or seasonal rental become a residential tenancy governed by RPL Article 7 and its attendant tenant protections?

A genuine transient occupancy — a family renting a furnished lakefront cottage for one or two weeks as a vacation, with no intention of establishing the property as a primary residence — is generally not a residential tenancy under RPL Article 7. The eviction procedures, notice requirements, security deposit rules, and habitability obligations that apply to residential tenancies do not apply in the same way to a true transient hotel-style occupancy. But the line between transient occupancy and residential tenancy is a fact-specific determination that depends on the duration of the stay, the intent of the parties, and the circumstances of the occupancy. A seasonal rental that runs from May through October, or a winter rental that allows an occupant to establish the lakefront property as their primary address, is far more likely to be treated as a residential tenancy by a New York court than a two-week summer rental. Yates County landlords who operate seasonal lakefront rentals and who have not thought carefully about where their specific arrangements fall on this spectrum should consult counsel before a dispute forces the issue.

Good Cause Eviction and the Small-County Landlord

The Good Cause Eviction Law applies throughout Yates County to most residential tenants not covered by rent stabilization — which is every residential tenant in the county, since there is no rent stabilization anywhere in Yates County. Under Good Cause, covered tenants cannot be evicted or have their lease non-renewed without a legally recognized reason, and rent increases exceeding the lower of 10% or 5% plus CPI are presumptively unreasonable. In Yates County’s market of very small landlords — individuals who own one or two rental units, often in a building where they themselves live — the owner-occupancy exemption for buildings with fewer than four units where the owner genuinely resides on the premises is the most important provision to understand. Many Yates County landlords who rent out a unit in their own home or in a two-family building where they live may qualify for this exemption, which would remove their tenancies from Good Cause coverage entirely. But “may qualify” is not the same as “does qualify,” and verifying exemption status with counsel before serving a non-renewal notice is a step that costs very little and avoids a great deal of potential legal exposure.

Yates County is the final entry in this series covering all 62 New York counties, and it is in some ways the most fitting conclusion: a tiny, rural, wine-country county at the geographic and demographic opposite end of the spectrum from the Bronx or Brooklyn, and yet governed by the same statewide landlord-tenant framework that applies from Montauk to Niagara Falls. New York State Real Property Law Article 7 does not make exceptions for small counties, informal markets, or long-standing local customs. The security deposit is capped at one month everywhere. The notice requirements apply in Penn Yan as in White Plains. The warranty of habitability is implied in every lease from Yates County to Westchester County. For landlords operating anywhere in New York State, the lesson of 62 counties is the same: know the law, document everything, maintain your properties proactively, screen tenants consistently, and treat every tenancy as the legal relationship it is — regardless of how small the town or how well you know your tenant.

This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Yates 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 and local 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 seasonal rental classification question. Last updated: March 2026.

🗺️ Neighboring Counties
Ontario County → Seneca County → Schuyler County →
Steuben County → Livingston County →
⚠️ Legal Disclaimer: This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Yates 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. 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 seasonal rental classification question. Last updated: March 2026.

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