My apartment has no heat or hot water.
A clear, step-by-step plan for getting your landlord to fix the problem — written for the moment you're standing in your kitchen wondering what to do.
This is a stressful situation and you shouldn't have to deal with it. The good news: NYC has some of the strongest heat and hot water protections in the country, and the steps below have worked for thousands of tenants.
Read this whole page first if you can. You don't need to take every step — you just need to know what the full path looks like so you can decide how far to go. Most tenants only need the first two or three steps.
If anyone in your apartment is elderly, disabled, a young child, or has a medical condition affected by cold: treat this as urgent. Skip ahead to Step 3 immediately and mention the vulnerable resident when you file your complaint.
What NYC law requires
Your landlord must provide:
- Hot water year-round, at a minimum of 120°F, every day of the year.
- Heat during "heat season" (October 1 – May 31)
- Daytime (6 AM – 10 PM): If it's below 55°F outside, your apartment must be at least 68°F inside.
- Nighttime (10 PM – 6 AM): Your apartment must be at least 62°F inside, regardless of outside temperature.
Source: NYC Department of Housing Preservation & Development
What to do, step by step
Document the problem right now.
Everything you do after this depends on having evidence. Housing Court and HPD inspections both need documentation. A verbal complaint to your landlord will not hold up if this ends up in court.
How to do it- Get a thermometer. A cheap one from a dollar store or hardware store is fine.
- Take temperature readings inside your apartment, and outside if you can (your phone's weather app works). Write down the date, time, indoor temp, and outdoor temp.
- Take readings a few times a day, especially during legally-required heat hours.
- Photograph your thermometer next to something showing the time — a phone clock, wall clock, or newspaper.
- If hot water is the issue, time how long the water runs cold and note the warmest temperature it reaches.
A running log with every reading. Met Council on Housing has a free Tenant Heat Log PDF designed to be accepted as evidence in Housing Court.
Tell your landlord, in writing.
Most heat and hot water problems are fixed at this step. Many landlords respond once they know there's a problem. Just as important: creating a written record protects you if things escalate. A phone call or text to your super doesn't count as the same kind of evidence as a dated written notice.
How to do it- Write a short, factual message to your landlord or management company. Email is fine. If you don't have an email, send a letter by USPS Certified Mail with Return Receipt — a few dollars, but proof they received it.
- Fill in your details below, then copy the message and send it.
- Keep a copy of what you sent and any response.
Subject: Heat and hot water not working at
Dear ,
I am writing to inform you that my apartment at has not had adequate since . I have recorded indoor temperatures as low as during , which is below the legal minimum required by NYC Housing Maintenance Code.
Please restore immediately. If the problem is not resolved within 24 hours, I will be filing a complaint with 311 and HPD.
For reference, related HPD violation(s) on file at this address: .
Thank you,
A responsive landlord will acknowledge your message within a day and send someone to fix the problem. If you don't hear back within 24 hours, or if the problem continues, go to Step 3.
File a 311 complaint.
This is the step that triggers the city to send an inspector. A 311 complaint creates an official record, gets HPD involved, and can result in a legal violation issued against your landlord.
How to do it — pick what's easiest- By phone: Call 311. If you're deaf or hard of hearing, use TTY at (212) 504-4115
- Online: Go to portal.311.nyc.gov and search for "heat" or "hot water."
- Mobile app: Download the NYC 311 app (iOS or Android) and file from there.
"I'd like to file a complaint about no heat (or hot water) at my apartment. The problem started on [date]. I've recorded indoor temperatures of [temperature]. I already contacted my landlord on [date] and the problem hasn't been fixed."
If anyone in your apartment is elderly, disabled, or a young child, mention it: "There is a [vulnerable person] living in the apartment."
- HPD may call your landlord first and give them a chance to fix the problem.
- If the problem isn't fixed, HPD sends an inspector. For winter heat complaints, inspectors often arrive within 24–48 hours.
- The inspector may arrive unannounced. If you won't be home, ask a neighbor to let them in or leave a note with a phone number.
- If the inspector confirms the problem, they'll issue a violation against the landlord. This carries civil penalties of $250–$500 per day for a first violation, and $500–$1,000 per day for repeat violations.
Check the status and keep a paper trail.
You need to know whether HPD has actually inspected, whether a violation was issued, and what the landlord has done in response. This is also the moment to decide whether to escalate.
- Go to HPDOnline and enter your building's address.
- Look for open violations, especially under "heat" or "hot water." If your complaint resulted in a violation, you'll see it here.
- Note the violation number, date issued, and classification. Heat and hot water violations are typically Class C — immediately hazardous.
- Save a screenshot or print the page.
Violations typically appear online within a few days of the inspection. If your complaint doesn't show up at all, the inspection may not have happened yet, or the inspector didn't find a violation — in which case, call 311 again and request another inspection.
If nothing's working: escalate.
By this point, you've given your landlord multiple chances and the city has been involved. If you're still without heat or hot water, you have stronger options — but most involve legal or advocacy help, and you shouldn't try them alone.
A. Call the Met Council on Housing Tenants' Rights HotlineFree, staffed by trained volunteers, and the best starting point for figuring out what to do next. They can help you decide between the options below and point you to the right legal help.
- Phone: 212-979-0611
- Hours: Mon & Wed 1:30–8 PM, Fri 1:30–5 PM.
- Heads up: The hotline is very busy — call after 4 PM if you can, and avoid Mondays. Volunteer-staffed, so it occasionally closes on short notice.
A legal proceeding asking a judge to order your landlord to make repairs. You can file one yourself or with help from a free legal services organization. An HP Action can result in a court order forcing the landlord to fix the problem, plus fines.
C. If you're rent-stabilized or rent-controlled: file for a rent reductionNYS Homes and Community Renewal (DHCR) can order a rent reduction when essential services aren't provided. You'll need the HPD inspection report from Step 4. Use Form HHW-1 or call DHCR at 833-499-0343.
D. If you qualify: free legal representationNYC's Right to Counsel program provides free lawyers to low-income tenants facing housing issues. The Met Council hotline (option A) can help you figure out if you qualify.
Free help available
- Met Council on Housing Tenants' Rights Hotline 212-979-0611 Free advice from trained volunteers. Mon & Wed 1:30–8 PM, Fri 1:30–5 PM. Not lawyers, but very knowledgeable.
- NYC 311 Dial 311 For filing complaints, checking complaint status, and reaching the Tenant Helpline.
- Housing Court Answers 212-962-4795 Help navigating Housing Court, including HP Actions.
- Legal Services NYC 917-661-4500 Free legal help for low-income tenants, multiple boroughs.
Sources & verification
- NYC HPD — Heat and Hot Water Information.
- Met Council on Housing — Heat & Hot Water.
- Met Council on Housing — Tenants' Rights Hotline.
- NYS HCR — Form HHW-1
All sources verified April 13, 2026. Found an error? Tell us.