New York Tax Code § 1444

Exemptions
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
* § 1444. Exemptions. 1. The following shall be exempt from the\npayment of the real estate transfer tax:\n  (a) The state of New York, or any of its agencies, instrumentalities,\npolitical subdivisions, or public corporations (including a public\ncorporation created pursuant to an agreement or compact with another\nstate or Dominion of Canada); and\n  (b) The United Nations, the United States of America or any of its\nagencies or instrumentalities.\n  2. The tax shall not apply to any of the following conveyances:\n  (a) Conveyances to the United Nations, the United States of America,\nthe state of New York, or any of their instrumentalities, agencies or\npolitical subdivisions (or any public corporation, including a public\ncorporation created pursuant to agreement or compact with another state\nor the Dominion of Canada);\n  (b) Conveyances which are or were used to secure a debt or other\nobligation;\n  (c) Conveyances which, without additional consideration, confirm,\ncorrect, modify or supplement a deed previously recorded;\n  (d) Conveyances of real property without consideration and otherwise\nthan in connection with a sale, including deeds conveying realty as bona\nfide gifts;\n  (e) Conveyances given in connection with a tax sale;\n  (f) Conveyances to effectuate a mere change of identity or form of\nownership or organization where there is no change in beneficial\nownership, other than conveyances to a cooperative housing corporation\nof the real property comprising the cooperative dwelling or dwellings;\n  (g) Conveyances which consist of a deed of partition;\n  (h) Conveyances given pursuant to the federal bankruptcy act;\n  (i) Conveyances of real property which consist of the execution of a\ncontract to sell real property without the use or occupancy of such\nproperty or the granting of an option to purchase real property without\nthe use or occupancy of such property;\n  (j) Conveyances of real property, where the entire parcel of real\nproperty to be conveyed is the subject of one or more of the following\ndevelopment restrictions:\n  (1) agricultural, conservation, scenic, or an open space easement,\n  (2) covenants or restrictions prohibiting development,\n  (3) a purchase of development rights agreement,\n  (4) a transfer of development rights agreement, where the property\nbeing conveyed has had its development rights removed,\n  (5) said real property is subject to the development restriction of an\nagricultural district or individual commitment, pursuant to article\ntwenty-five-AA of the agriculture and markets law,\n  (6) real property subject to any locally adopted land preservation\nagreement, provided said exemption is included in the local law imposing\nthe tax authorized by this article;\n  (k) Conveyances of real property, where the property is viable\nagriculture land as defined in subdivision seven of section three\nhundred one of the agriculture and markets law and the entire property\nto be conveyed is to be made subject to one of the development\nrestrictions provided for in subparagraph two of paragraph (j) of this\nsubdivision provided that said development restriction precludes the\nconversion of the property to a non-agricultural use for at least three\nyears from the date of transfer, and said development restriction is\nevidenced by an easement, agreement or other suitable instrument which\nis to be conveyed to the town simultaneously with the conveyance of the\nreal property; or\n  (l) Conveyances of real property for open space, parks, or historic\npreservation purposes to any not-for-profit tax exempt corporation\noperated for conservation, environmental or historic preservation\npurposes.\n  (m) Conveyances of real property to any tax exempt corporation,\nincorporated pursuant to the not-for-profit corporation law or the\nprivate housing finance law, where said conveyance is for the purposes\nof providing affordable housing opportunities within the town and such\ncorporation is inco

‹ Prev All New York sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.