Ultra-Rich Getting Big Breaks on Property Taxes

New York City

Tax assessments are super-low for the condos of the city's super-rich.

March 4, 2019 — Ken Griffin’s $238 million condo valued at just $9.4 million.

Before you cry any more tears over those incredible shrinking real estate values on Billionaires’ Row and the city’s other nests of ultra-luxury condos, consider the flipside of the coin. Their properties might be losing value, but the super-rich are enjoying some monster breaks on their property tax bills. 

Case in point: after dropping $238 million on a condo at 220 Central Park South – the most money ever paid for a residence in the history of the United States – multi-billionaire Ken Griffin will be thrilled to learn that the city’s Department of Finance has pegged its taxable value at just $9.4 million, the Wall Street Journal reports

How is this possible? Because the city’s antiquated and unloved tax system requires all condos and co-ops to be assessed as if they were rental buildings, which tends to artificially deflate the tax bill for high-end properties. Additionally, there are caps on yearly tax increases, which has benefited residents of prime Manhattan and Brooklyn neighborhoods where real estate values have soared during the recent post-recession boom. Co-ops and condos in prime neighborhoods were valued at about 20 percent of their market value, according to the Independent Budget Office

“It is a crazy system,” says Martha Stark, a former city finance commissioner and current policy director for Tax Equity Now New York, a diverse coalition that has filed a lawsuit seeking to reform the city’s property tax system. A mayoral commission has been holding public hearings on the issue and is expected to come forward soon with recommendations on tax reform. Meanwhile, a proposal gaining traction in the General Assembly would slap an additional tax on absentee owners of pricey pied-a-terre apartments in New York City. 

The assessment on Griffin’s penthouse was determined before the purchase closed, and one expert says the rate could increase in the 2019-2020 fiscal year. But unless major reform comes, it’s unlikely the condo will be taxed at anything close to its actual value.

Subscribe

join now

Got elected? Are you on your co-op/condo board?

Then don’t miss a beat! Stories you can use to make your building better, keep it out of trouble, save money, enhance market value, and make your board life a whole lot easier!