Stabilized.
StabilizedManhattan10075

516 East 79 Street

Manhattan · 10075 · BBL 1014900036

Current evidence

Public records show current evidence of rent-stabilized units at 516 East 79 Street.

It appears on the newest DHCR building registration list (2024 registrations).

Its 2024 property-tax bill reported 99 rent-stabilized units.

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

YearOn DHCR building listStabilized units on tax bill
2024yes99
202399
202299
202198
202098
201998
201896
201796
201695
201595
201494
2013yes84
2012yes77
2011yes72
201068
2009yes68
200882
200782

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

Residential units
99
Year built
1910
pre-1974 — the classic stabilization profile (with 6+ units)
Tax program
J-51
stabilization can be tied to the program’s term
DHCR status
MULTIPLE DWELLING A
Owner of record
78/79 York Associates LLC
per PLUTO (public record)

Get the definitive answer for your unit

  1. 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.
  2. 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.
  3. 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 516 East 79 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.

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