This unit qualifies by class and value, and no residence benefit is on file.
Surcharge if non-primary
$83.7K/yr
Billed quarterly: ~$20.9K per quarter (Feb · May · Aug · Nov)
At this bracket, the surcharge would add roughly 70% on top of the current property tax bill.
Last Sale
01/13/2025 · $22.5M
Sale vs. City Value
Sold for $22.5M in 2025. City values it at $2.09M today.
✦See the estimated total bill — current property tax + surcharge, per quarter and per year · Pro →No residence benefit on file
That's what puts this unit in the possible-exposure range. We checked every owner-occupancy benefit the city records — none is present:
467-a · STAR · SCHE · DHE · veterans · clergy — none found
10 units in this blockshow possible exposure · ~$704.6K/yr aggregate
Is This Your Home?
If the owner lives here as a primary residence, file the residence-benefit paperwork with DOF before notices go out. If not, the figure above is the estimated yearly cost. It's billed on top of the existing property tax.
How to contest a determination →
What Happens Next
Jul 1, 2026Tax begins
The surcharge starts. It applies to the tax year beginning on this date.
~Aug 30, 2026·The day to watch
DOF is expected to notify owners whose records show possible exposure. This is when you'd find out.
Contest window
Owners can document residence status with DOF and contest before bills are sent.
~Nov 2026First bill
First quarterly bills land for owners without a residence benefit on file.
Every quarter after
The surcharge recurs every quarter (Feb · May · Aug · Nov) for as long as the unit isn't a primary residence. Ongoing, not a one-time charge.
Methodology. We read NYC's published assessments and the residence benefits on file with DOF. We don't see leases, in-person occupancy, or out-of-state residence records. The city issues the determination. This card shows what the public record says.
View full deed history → free signupCondo unit BBLs link to the parent building for full deed context.