Glossary · 8 min read
NYC Tax Abatements Explained: J-51, 421-a, and ICAP
By NYC Property Audit · Published March 8, 2025 · Updated April 8, 2026
NYC's three big property-tax abatement programs — J-51, 421-a, and ICAP — collectively reduce billions in annual tax bills for buildings that meet specific construction or rehabilitation criteria. For buyers, they're a double-edged sword: low taxes now, much higher taxes when the abatement burns off.
This guide explains what each program does, how to tell which (if any) applies to a building you're considering, and what your tax bill will look like the year after expiration.
Quick reference
- J-51 — rehab abatement (existing buildings). 14 or 34 years, taper at the end.
- 421-a — new construction abatement. 10, 20, or 25 years, taper at the end.
- ICAP — Industrial & Commercial Abatement Program. 8 or 25 years, commercial only.
All three taper toward full-tax status in the final years — so the "expiration date" on the abatement isn't a cliff, but it is a steady climb.
J-51 — rehabilitation abatement
J-51 incentivizes substantial rehab of older NYC residential buildings — roof replacement, system upgrades, conversion of non-residential space to residential. The program has been the subject of legal challenges since 2009 (Roberts v. Tishman Speyer Properties), particularly around rent-stabilization status of units in J-51 buildings.
Duration: 14 years for most projects; 34 years for major capital improvements with specific affordability criteria.
Tax impact: reduces assessed value by the cost of approved improvements, then exempts the increase from tax. Buildings can save 50-90% of what their post-rehab tax would otherwise be.
Affordability strings: J-51 buildings have rent-stabilization obligations on units throughout the abatement period. Read more on NYC rent stabilization →
Common gotcha: if you're buying a condo in a J-51 building, your unit is exempt from rent stabilization, but other units may still be stabilized — which affects building cash flow and reserve fund.
421-a — new construction abatement
421-a (and its successor, Affordable New York / 485-x) incentivizes new residential construction in exchange for affordability commitments. The program has changed several times — the version that applies depends on when the building broke ground.
Common versions:
- 421-a (1985-2015) — 10 or 15 year exemption from tax on improved value; some required affordability set-asides.
- 421-a (2017, "Affordable New York") — 25-35 year exemption, more stringent affordability rules.
- 485-x (2024 onward) — current program, replaces 421-a.
Tax impact: typically pays $0-$500/month in tax during the abatement; jumps to $1,500-$5,000+/month after burn-off depending on assessed value.
Critical to check: the abatement EXPIRATION date. Most NYC 421-a condos sold in 2010-2015 are reaching the end of their 10-year abatements. If you're buying one in 2026, you might see "current monthly tax: $400" — and not realize that's the abatement period, with $2,800/month coming in 2-3 years.
ICAP — Industrial & Commercial Abatement Program
ICAP applies to commercial buildings (and the commercial component of mixed-use buildings) that build, expand, or rehabilitate in specific zones outside Manhattan core.
Duration: 8 years standard, up to 25 years for specific industrial / manufacturing in designated zones.
Why renters / residential buyers care: if you're buying or renting in a mixed-use building (e.g. condo above a commercial first floor), the commercial portion's ICAP affects the building's overall financial health and reserve contributions.
How to tell if a building has an active abatement
Three places to look:
- NYC DOF property tax bill — every quarterly tax bill lists active abatement codes and amounts. The most reliable source.
- ACRIS — original abatement filings are recorded as documents.
- The building's offering plan (for condos / co-ops) — describes any abatement and projected burn-off timeline.
Or pull the property's full DOF tax history through us — we surface the year-over-year trajectory and flag suspicious spikes that often correlate with abatement expiration. Run a free audit →
What "burn-off" looks like in numbers
Example: a 1-bedroom condo with $50K assessed value (Class 2) and a 20-year 421-a abatement that started in 2015:
- 2015-2025 — minimal tax, often $400-$800/month
- 2025-2030 — phase-out begins; tax climbs ~20%/year as exemption ramps down
- 2031+ — full tax: ~$2,200-$2,800/month on the same unit
If you buy in 2026 and budget for current taxes, you'll be paying 4x by 2031. Some buyers plan for this and refinance / increase income before the burn-off; some don't.
What to ask your attorney
- "What's the building's abatement status and expiration year?"
- "What's the projected full-tax amount for my unit in the first post-abatement year?"
- "Is the building rent-stabilized due to J-51?"
- "How does the abatement burn-off interact with the underlying mortgage and reserve fund?"
Related reading
For condo-specific DD that includes tax-history analysis, see our pre-purchase NYC condo inspection checklist. For broader frame, the NYC building due-diligence checklist.