NYC Rolls Out Pied-à-Terre Tax, Sending Notices to Luxury Second-Home Owners

TL;DR Summary
New York City is starting enforcement of the pied-à-terre tax on non-primary luxury residences; the Department of Finance will issue notices (by August 30) and can audit six years back, with penalties up to 50% for false information. The tax is expected to raise roughly $340-500 million annually from about 10,000 properties. Rates range from 0.8-1.3% for one-to-three family homes, and 4-6.5% for co-ops/condos (top rates apply to highest-valued units). The city will recalibrate values in a second phase through 2031, and owners have 30 days to appeal; lawsuits are anticipated.
- NYC sending out first pied-à-terre tax notices to owners of luxury second homes New York Post
- A New Wave of Taxation on Second Homes JD Supra
- New laws take effect in New York this July: Everything you need to know FOX 5 New York
- NYC's New Pied-à-Terre Tax Explained The Real Deal
- New York City Pied-à-Terre Tax Takes Effect July 1 Loeb & Loeb LLP
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