New York's adverse possession period is 10 years of continuous, exclusive possession under RPAPL Sections 501 and 511. A 2024 budget amendment to RPAPL Section 711 clarified that squatters are not tenants, making it easier for owners and police to remove unauthorized occupants who have not met the 10-year threshold.
An adverse possessor under RPAPL Section 501 is one who "occupies real property of another...in a manner that would give the owner a cause of action for ejectment." Title can transfer only after "continued occupation and possession of the premises...for ten years" under RPAPL Section 511, and possession must be hostile, actual, open and notorious, exclusive, and continuous. The 2024 FY25 budget amended RPAPL Section 711 so that "a tenant shall not include a squatter," defined as "a person who enters onto or intrudes upon real property without permission and continues to occupy without title, right or permission." This change rebuts the misconception that a squatter gains tenant protections after 30 days; only the 10-year statutory period creates any ownership claim.
No specific statutory penalty for occupancy itself; an owner may pursue ejectment or summary proceedings, and squatters short of 10 years gain no ownership and no tenant status.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Albany, NY
Albany Police remove abandoned vehicles under New York Vehicle & Traffic Law Β§1224 and the city's 72-hour street-parking rule. A vehicle is "abandoned" under...
Albany, NY
Albany's Unified Sustainable Development Ordinance (Chapter 375) restricts where boats, boat trailers, campers, travel trailers, and recreational vehicles ma...
Albany, NY
New York is one of a small group of states with a "spite fence" statute on the books. Under Real Property Actions & Proceedings Law (RPAPL) Β§843, any fence o...
Albany, NY
Albany requires a building permit before constructing a new fence or replacing an existing one. Under USDO Β§375-98 ("Location of Fences and Walls"), fences i...
Albany, NY
Albany has no breed-specific dog ban. New York Agriculture & Markets Law Β§107(5) expressly preempts breed-specific legislation: municipalities may run their ...
Albany, NY
Albany permits up to six hens (no roosters) at any residential dwelling with a hen license issued by the City Clerk under Chapter 115, Article VIII. The appl...
See how Albany's squatter's rights & adverse possession rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.