EDGE Blog
How the 40x Rule Works in NYC
Published: April 20, 2026
If you have looked at NYC apartments for more than five minutes, you have probably seen people throw around one number like it is sacred law: 40x the rent.
Here is the part people mess up: the 40x rule is not an NYC law. It is a very common landlord screening standard. And yes, in practice, that still matters a lot.
This guide breaks down what the 40x rule actually means, how to calculate it, when it applies, when it does not, and what renters can do if they fall short.
📌 Quick answer
The 40x rule means many NYC landlords want your gross annual income to equal at least 40 times the monthly rent.
- $2,500 rent = $100,000 income
- $3,000 rent = $120,000 income
- $4,000 rent = $160,000 income
- It is usually based on income before taxes, not take-home pay
What’s in this guide
What the 40x rule actually means
The 40x rule is a shorthand income test used by many NYC landlords and property managers. The idea is simple:
Monthly rent × 40 = target gross annual income
It is meant to show that a renter can comfortably afford the apartment. Many landlords use it as a screening benchmark because it keeps rent at about 30% or less of gross annual income.
How to calculate the 40x rule
Method 1: Start with the rent
Take the monthly rent and multiply it by 40.
$3,200 × 40 = $128,000
Method 2: Start with your income
Take your gross annual income and divide it by 40.
$100,000 ÷ 40 = $2,500 rent target
The key word here is gross. Landlords usually mean income before taxes, deductions, and whatever financial damage your paycheck takes before it reaches your account.
40x rule examples by rent level
| Monthly Rent | Income Needed at 40x | What That Means |
|---|---|---|
| $2,000 | $80,000 | Entry-level or roommate-friendly range in some areas |
| $2,500 | $100,000 | A very common NYC threshold point |
| $3,000 | $120,000 | Where solo renting gets harder fast |
| $3,500 | $140,000 | Common in stronger-demand neighborhoods |
| $4,000 | $160,000 | A serious number for a solo applicant |
How it works with roommates and guarantors
👥 With roommates
In many cases, landlords look at the combined lease structure, but some expect each person to qualify based on their share of the rent. Others evaluate the household together.
Translation: do not assume every building handles roommates the same way.
🛡️ With a guarantor
If you do not meet 40x, many landlords may accept a guarantor. A common expectation is that the guarantor earns 80x the monthly rent.
Some landlords also want the guarantor to have strong credit and sometimes live in the tri-state area.
Does every landlord use the 40x rule?
No. But a lot of them do.
Large management companies
Usually more rigid. Their screening tends to follow standardized thresholds closely.
Smaller landlords
May be more flexible if your credit is strong, your savings are solid, or your full financial profile looks low-risk.
Stricter buildings
Some require more than 40x. StreetEasy notes that certain buildings can ask for 50x.
What if you do not meet the 40x rule?
1. Add a guarantor
This is the most common fix if your income is below the target.
2. Strengthen the rest of your application
Strong credit, cash reserves, clean documentation, and stable employment can matter, especially with smaller landlords.
3. Adjust your rent target
Sometimes the smartest move is just math. A lower rent target can instantly make your search more realistic.
4. Consider roommates
Splitting rent can move a listing from impossible to workable very quickly.
The real takeaway
The 40x rule is not magical. It is just a screening formula. But because so many landlords use it, renters need to understand it before they waste time on listings that will not work on paper.
✨ The fastest way to apartment hunt smarter in NYC is to know your number before you start. Not after you fall in love with the unit.
Need help finding a rental that fits your numbers?
EDGE helps renters search smarter, compare options faster, and avoid chasing apartments that do not fit the application math.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the 40x rule a law in NYC?
No. It is a common landlord screening standard, not a city law.
Does the 40x rule use gross or net income?
It usually uses gross annual income, meaning income before taxes.
What if I do not make 40x the rent?
You may still have options, including a guarantor, roommates, a stronger financial profile, or a lower rent target.
How much does a guarantor usually need to make?
A common rule of thumb is around 80x the monthly rent, though requirements vary by landlord and building.
Do all landlords require exactly 40x?
No. Some are more flexible, while others may be stricter and ask for 50x or more.