253 Hart Street
Brooklyn · 11206 · BBL 3017690054
Public records last show evidence of rent-stabilized units at 253 Hart Street in 2009.
Nothing appears after 2009. Units may have been deregulated under pre-2019 rules, or the owner may simply have stopped registering. If you live here and suspect your unit should be stabilized, the rent-history check below is worth doing — improper deregulation is a real and recoverable thing.
This is building-level evidence, not a guarantee about any specific apartment. The definitive answer for your unit is a free official rent history — steps below.
Evidence timeline
| Year | On DHCR building list | Stabilized units on tax bill |
|---|---|---|
| 2024 | — | — |
| 2009 | yes | 6 |
| 2008 | — | 6 |
| 2007 | — | 6 |
Tax-bill counts are self-reported by owners; DHCR lists cover registrations for the stated year. A missing year is often a paperwork lapse, not proof of deregulation. List coverage here: 2007–2013 and 2024; tax-bill counts: 2007–2024.
Building facts
Get the definitive answer for your unit
- Request your rent history from NYS Homes & Community Renewal — free, and only the tenant (or with the unit’s address) can get it. Use HCR’s Rent Connect / “ask a question” portal and choose rent history, or check the building in the DHCR building search.
- Read the year-by-year registered rents. If your unit shows registrations, it has a stabilization history; the legal rent trail should connect to what you pay today.
- If the numbers jump suspiciously or years are blank, talk to a tenant resource — the Met Council on Housing hotline or Housing Court Answers — before signing anything or confronting anyone. Overcharges can be recoverable.
Get the full report — $25
A complete evidence dossier for 253 Hart Street: the full year-by-year timeline, an overcharge-signal analysis, a step-by-step walkthrough for pulling and reading your own official rent history, and the tenant resources to use if the numbers look wrong. Delivered instantly to your email as a permanent link.
One-time payment. Summarizes public records — evidence, not legal advice. Already bought one? Find your report.