State of the record, read live in your browser
The city's open record. Read live, right now.
New York City publishes every housing-maintenance violation it issues. The figures below are the immediately-hazardous part of that record, counted live from the city's open-data API in your browser as this page loads. No account, no cache, no number typed by us. Aggregates only, never an address or a name.
What the numbers are, and are not.
Class C
Immediately hazardous conditions: no heat, no hot water, lead paint where a child lives, vermin, defective wiring. The city's most serious housing class.
Trailing three years
Violations issued in the last three years. This is a count of the issued record, not a claim about what remains open today. Certification status changes daily on the city record.
Aggregate only
Counts, never a list. This page names no building and no owner. The per-case work, verified and source-linked, is what a firm receives in a brief.
Where our feed sits in this record.
Our case files are drawn from this same public record and refreshed against it. The most recent source dates behind a brief:
- HPD violations, as of July 16, 2026
- ECB / OATH matters, as of July 15, 2026
- 2,936 case files in the current feed, each through 24 build checks and a 32-check claim gate
We began recording the city's record in July 2026. A single reading is a snapshot; the history is the archive we keep behind it.
Cite this page
ViolationScout, State of the NYC Compliance Record, read live from NYC Open Data (HPD Housing Maintenance Code Violations, dataset wvxf-dwi5). https://violationscout.com/record
Figures are aggregate counts of issued Class C violations over the trailing three years, queried live from the city's open-data API. Source: NYC Open Data.
The per-case record, verified.
The counts above are the shape of the problem. A brief is the part your firm can act on: named, source-linked, hand-verified.