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How squatters’ rights in New York were defanged through seven words added to state law

Queens home owner weeps at press conference calling on squatters to be removed from her home
Susan Weir, the owner of a Queens house taken over by seven squatters, expressed gratitude at a March rally for the support from the community.
Photo by Iryna Shkurhan

Seven words added to New York state law in the recently-passed state budget both weakens the power of squatters, and gives homeowners a sense of security.

The legal change now clearly states that “a tenant shall not include a squatter,” thereby stripping squatters of their tenant rights, and making it easier for police to remove them without forcing the owner to resolve the issue in housing court – a process that can take years and expensive legal fees.

The passage of the law in the state’s fiscal budget for 2025 can be attributed to two elected officials in northeast Queens, who introduced legislation earlier this month after seeing a rise in squatters cases across Queens. 

Queens state Senator John C. Liu (D-Bayside) and Assembly Member Ron Kim (D-Flushing) both introduced laws in their respective chambers to formally define squatters as separate from tenants earlier this month. While their bills were just getting started, Governor Kathy Hochul took note and signed off on a housing law that included language from their legislation. 

“It was important that we acted with urgency to send a strong message to squatters who take over private homes that they are not welcome in our community. Scam artists who intrude on others’ homes should not have rights as tenants in state housing law, and this inclusion in the budget codifies that in simple, straightforward language,” Liu said in a statement. 

A case that spurred change

Queens landlord, Hong Chen, shared his lengthy ordeal with removing squatters from his property at a March rally in Bayside, QueensPhoto by Iryna Shkurhan

The legislation defines squatters as those who take over private property without permission of the owner, the owner’s agent or another person entitled to possession of the property. The law previously allowed squatters to claim tenants rights after residing on the property for 30 days without needing proof of a lease. 

One Flushing homeowner was arrested last month for changing the locks to her house in an effort to kick squatters out of her home, as it is considered an illegal eviction. At a rally in Bayside last month, one landlord recalled how it took him two years in court to evict non-paying tenants.

“Our state needed stronger protections for law abiding property owners who are being victimized by squatters. Our new law defines these terms more precisely,” State Assemblymember Kim said. “Any occupant who unlawfully resides in a property owner’s home will be more easily removed.”

Liu noted that in pursuing stronger measures to protect homeowners in the future, renters should not inadvertently be put at risk. The overall budget package also included anti-price gouging measures for renters and efforts to combat discrimination against Section 8 households. 

Gov. Kathy Hochul reinforced that this year’s budget included historic protections for tenants and homeowners. She signed the new squatter law into effect this week. 

“There are people illegally in other peoples’ homes and creating havoc, so we needed to make sure our budget, the laws we introduced just last week, would address this crisis,” Hochul said in an interview with ABC. “We put them into state law because it makes sense.”

This story was first posted on our affiliate, QNS.com.