Skip to content

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S U V W X Y Z
Ce Cl Co
IQ-@rius February 8, 2026

Certificate of Occupancy (CO)

Certificate of occupancy
Certificate of occupancy

A Certificate of Occupancy (CO) is more than just another city form – it is the official permission for people to live in or use a building in New York City. Without this permission, you cannot legally live in, rent out, or sell your property, no matter how long the building has been standing. A valid CO (or a Temporary Certificate of Occupancy, TCO, while final work is still in progress) confirms that the basic rules for safe use and legal occupancy have been met.

If you change how the building is used – for example, turning a store into an apartment, or splitting one large apartment into two smaller ones – the City expects an updated or amended CO that matches the new reality on the ground. The CO also acts as a snapshot showing that construction or alterations were done under approved plans and permits, and that required city fees and outstanding violations were properly resolved.

Quick Facts:

  • Who gives the CO? – NYC Department of Buildings (DOB*).
  • What does it say? – If the building is a 1‑family house, 2‑family house, apartment building, store, office, etc., and sometimes how many people or families can be there
  • When do you need it? – Before anyone can legally live in or use the building.
  • Why is it important? – It shows the building passed inspections and follows safety and zoning rules.
  • CO
  • legalize
  • building
  • amended CO
  • approval
  • verifies compliance

Use this form to suggest corrections, add missing details, or request clarification for any Encyclopedia entry. Your input helps us improve this Project for everyone.

.

By submitting this form, you accept the privacy policy.

Your advertisement could appear here
Your advertisement could appear here

Related Entries

COMMENTS