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Staten Island NYC Landlord Database

Staten Island is the smallest of the five boroughs by population and the most suburban in character. Residential stock is dominated by 1–2 family homes and townhouse developments concentrated on the North Shore, Mid-Island, and South Shore — with a smaller multi-family rental footprint than the other four boroughs. MetroDeeds tracks 0 residential property operators with at least one building in Staten Island, holding 0 buildings citywide and carrying 0 open HPD code violations between them. Distress scores, violation counts, deed activity, and operator portfolios are recomputed nightly from NYC Open Data. The full scoring formula is published in the methodology.

Updated: · Source: NYC HPD · ACRIS · NYC 311 · Public Advocate watchlist

Staten Island at a glance

Tracked operators
0
Buildings citywide
0
Open HPD violations
0
Avg distress score
0 / 100

Top operators by open HPD violations

Operators with at least one Staten Island building, ranked by total open HPD violations across their full citywide portfolio. Distress scores blend violation severity, eviction rate, 311 complaint volume, and acquisition cadence.

No operators in this borough cohort yet — check back after the next nightly compute.

Largest portfolios with Staten Island presence

Tracked operators by total citywide property count. Multi-borough operators are included if any of their portfolio sits inside Staten Island.

No operators in this borough cohort yet — check back after the next nightly compute.

Recent Staten Island deed activity

Most-recently-recorded ACRIS deed transfers in Staten Island. Click through to the full deed feed for buyer / seller names, mortgage data, and PLUTO context.

No recent deed activity in this borough — check back after the next ACRIS refresh.

Frequently asked about Staten Island landlord data

How many landlords does MetroDeeds track in Staten Island?

MetroDeeds is currently rebuilding the Staten Island operator cohort. The borough has a smaller multi-family rental footprint than the other four boroughs, so the named-operator count is naturally lower. Recompute runs nightly — check back after the next refresh.

Who is the worst landlord in Staten Island?

Staten Island does not currently have an operator at the top of the citywide violation leaderboard. The borough’s residential stock is dominated by 1–2 family homes (in Staten Island in particular), so multi-building distress patterns surface less frequently than in Manhattan, Brooklyn, or the Bronx. Check the citywide Landlord Ripoff Watch leaderboard for the full ranking.

How many HPD violations are open in Staten Island?

Open HPD violations across Staten Island's tracked operator cohort are currently zero in the cache snapshot. This is unusual and most likely indicates a transient compute or refresh issue rather than a clean borough — HPD reports thousands of open violations citywide every day. If this persists, the methodology page documents the underlying data sources.

How often is Staten Island data updated?

MetroDeeds runs a full nightly compute job at 4 AM ET that refreshes every operator’s violation count, property count, distress score, last acquisition date, and flag set. The borough hub page reads from that cache and re-renders every six hours via Next.js incremental static regeneration. Changes to underlying NYC Open Data (HPD violations, ACRIS deeds, OCA evictions, 311 complaints) flow through within 1–2 nightly runs of source-data publication.

Can I download Staten Island landlord data?

Free MetroDeeds accounts get 3 full due-diligence reports — no credit card required — and can browse the full Staten Island operator list at any time. Scout+ ($49.99/mo) unlocks unfiltered deed history, $/SF context, and full owner-of-record names. Pro ($149.99/mo) adds bulk CSV export of operator and deed data plus PDF portfolio reports. Enterprise ($499.99/mo) adds programmatic API access for automated workflows.

What's the difference between Staten Island HPD violations and DOB violations?

HPD (Department of Housing Preservation and Development) issues violations for tenant-facing housing-quality issues — heat, hot water, mold, leaks, pests, locks, peeling paint, broken windows. DOB (Department of Buildings) issues violations for construction-code and safety issues — illegal alterations, unsafe scaffolding, unregistered work, expired permits. MetroDeeds’ distress score weighs HPD violations because they reflect tenant-experienced conditions; DOB violations are tracked separately on each operator’s profile page under the Construction & Permits section.

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MetroDeeds is not affiliated with any government agency. All rankings, scores, and data are algorithmic and for informational purposes only — they do not constitute legal findings or accusations of wrongdoing. Always verify against authoritative public sources before making legal or financial decisions. Terms · Privacy · hello@metrodeeds.com