- Glossary
- /Succession Rights
NYC rental glossary
Succession Rights
The right of a family member to take over a rent-regulated lease when the named tenant dies or permanently leaves.
Succession rights let certain people inherit a rent-regulated tenancy when the tenant of record dies or permanently vacates. A qualifying family member — a spouse, and in many cases another relative or a long-term non-traditional family member — who has lived in the apartment as a primary residence for a required period (commonly two years, or one year for seniors and the disabled) can demand a renewal lease in their own name at the regulated rent.
Succession is how a rent-controlled or rent-stabilized apartment stays in a family across generations, and it is heavily litigated because the stakes — keeping a deeply below-market rent — are high. The successor must usually prove co-residency and a qualifying relationship.
For a brokerage, a succession claim means a unit that looked like it was about to come available may instead renew with a successor at the regulated rent.
Related terms
- Rent ControlThe older, smaller of NYC’s two rent-regulation systems, covering a shrinking set of long-occupied pre-1947 apartments.
- Rent StabilizationA NYC regulatory system that caps annual rent increases and grants tenants a near-automatic right to renew their lease.
- Renewal LeaseA lease offered to a sitting tenant to extend the tenancy — near-automatic and rent-capped for stabilized units.
- Legal Regulated RentThe maximum lawful rent for a rent-regulated unit, registered with the state and built up from a base plus permitted increases.
- Housing CourtThe NYC court that hears landlord-tenant disputes — evictions, repairs, and warranty-of-habitability claims.
This definition is general information about a New York City rental or rent-regulation concept, not legal advice. The rules change and often turn on facts specific to a building, unit, and tenancy — confirm the current rule and consult a qualified attorney before acting on any individual matter.
