New York Real Estate Journal

Relocation Liens & Why They Matter to Property Owners and Potential Buyers - by Kate Wildonger

January 27, 2026 - Brokerage
Kate Wildonger

When a building in New York City is deemed unsafe and issued a vacate order, the Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) may step in to relocate displaced tenants. While tenant safety is critical, the financial mechanism by which the City recovers relocation costs can expose property owners and future buyers to unexpected and expensive claims against the property.

What is a Relocation Lien?

A relocation lien is a charge the City places on a building for expenses it incurs relocating tenants after a vacate order. These expenses can include temporary housing, moving costs, and other relocation services. Under NYC’s Administrative Code, those relocation costs become a lien on the building and the lot upon which it stands if they go unpaid.

The Danger of “Springing” Liens 

Unlike typical liens that are recorded before a sale, relocation liens can be retroactive and delayed. HPD has up to one year from when relocation expenses are incurred to file a lien. The statute treats the latest date any relocation cost is incurred as the benchmark for that one-year window.

This means if HPD continues providing relocation services up to, or even after, a foreclosure sale or transfer, it may file a valid lien months later that retroactively attaches to the property. Buyers who thought the title was clean may suddenly face a large encumbrance they didn’t see at closing.

The Dollar Impact

Relocation services often continue for years, especially in cases where tenants remain in temporary housing under HPD’s care while an owner repairs conditions or litigates a vacate order. Because the lien can include all relocation costs over that period, the total can be significant, sometimes exceeding hundreds of thousands of dollars depending on how long services were provided.

Post-2021

In an important shift, NYC amended the law so that for vacate orders issued on or after September 14, 2021, relocation charges are billed by the Department of Finance (DOF) and treated as tax liens.

This matters because tax liens are typically prioritized above most other debts. Under NYC’s rules, these relocation tax liens have priority over mortgages, meaning they can outrank a lender’s secured interest.

This creates a risk not just for the owner of record at the time of the vacate order, but for any subsequent buyer or lender, even if the lien wasn’t visible during title review.

Standard Title Searches Aren’t Enough

A traditional title search will not necessarily reveal relocation charges that have not yet been filed as liens, charges that are accruing but unpaid, or charges that will be billed in the future through the DOF. Because of the way the statute works, a property might look lien-free at closing, but HPD could still file a relocation lien months later based on past expenses. 

What This Means for Buyers & Lenders

Investors and brokers should budget for potential relocation lien exposure when evaluating NYC multifamily assets, especially those with recent or historical vacate orders. Title underwriters may require additional documentation or direct confirmation from HPD that no relocation services are ongoing — even if the chain of title appears clean. Lenders should be aware that relocation liens can take priority over their mortgage liens, potentially affecting collateral value.

Bottom Line for NYC Property Owners

Relocation liens can be a financial liability that surfaces unexpectedly and with high priority, and the traditional protections of title insurance and public record searches may not fully capture such risk. 

Kate Wildonger is an associate at Romer Debbas.