So How Is Zohran Mamdani's New Pied-à-Terre Tax Supposed To Work?
/Here in New York, we continue to wait for the announcement of the annual budget that was due on April 1. Negotiations among the Governor and legislative leaders continue, with one big open issue being the potential extension of the “net zero” deadlines of the Climate Act.
While many issues may remain open, one thing on which there appears to be agreement is what they are calling the “pied-à-terre” tax — a real estate tax surcharge on New York City apartments valued at $5 million and up that are owned by people who are not permanent residents of New York. We know that that tax is an agreed part of the budget package because Mayor Mamdani bragged about it in his cringey video of April 15, which I covered (and linked) in my April 17 post.
Both Mamdani and Governor Hochul have asserted that the new tax will raise approximately $500 million per year in new revenue for the City. However, neither Mamdani’s video nor anything else has disclosed the details of how this new tax will be implemented.
At first glance, implementation might seem easy.



