New York Governor Kathy Hochul has revived a controversial "pied-à-terre" tax proposal, aiming to generate $500 million annually from roughly 13,000 nonprimary residences valued above $5 million. The plan, which emerged after Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s broader tax hikes faced opposition, would layer a surcharge on existing property taxes using a sliding scale. Framed as a fair way to make ultrawealthy nonresidents contribute to closing a $12 billion city deficit, the tax targets luxury condos, co-ops, and townhouses while exempting primary homes and full-time rentals.
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Beyond revenue risks, the tax would harm real estate related industries including construction, brokerage, interior design, and high end retail, undermining NYC’s status as a global wealth hub. Administrative challenges around verifying primary residence would also create enforcement headaches. The article concludes that the city’s real problem is unchecked spending, not insufficient revenue, with the budget exploding 81% to $127 billion since 2013. This "gimmicky" tax, the author warns, treats symptoms rather than the disease and risks accelerating outmigration without solving the structural deficit.