Look up your building's HPD violations

Every housing code violation ever issued in NYC is public record. Enter your address to see what's on file for your building — what's open, what's been resolved, and how serious each one was.

Look it up

Enter your NYC address.

No account or signup. Data comes live from NYC Open Data and Department of City Planning.

What you're looking at

HPD — the city's Department of Housing Preservation and Development — inspects apartments and issues violations when landlords break the housing code. Each violation has a class that tells you how serious it is:

Each violation also has a status: open means the landlord hasn't fixed it yet, closed means it's been resolved, and dismissed means HPD threw it out.

What to do with what you find

A pattern of open or repeated violations is powerful context. Landlords often behave differently when they know you're paying attention to public records, and city agencies and free tenant lawyers will take your situation more seriously when you can point to specific entries on the record.

If you're dealing with a specific problem, the step-by-step guides walk you through what to do next:

An honest note

HPD's records are public, but they're not a complete picture. Some violations age off the system, some landlords fix problems without the paper trail catching up, and not every issue in your apartment shows up here. Use this as a starting point — not the whole story.

If you need legal help, contact Met Council on Housing at 212-979-0611 or visit our Free help page for a full list of free hotlines and legal services.