Rules & Licenses
Buffalo Rental Owners Have Registration and Lead Checks
Buffalo rental owners should know when rental registration, inspections, and lead-hazard rules apply to their units.
Published June 23, 2026 · Last verified June 23, 2026
Buffalo rental compliance is more than a lease issue. Buffalo rental registration covers all non-owner-occupied single and two-family homes. Some three-family and mixed-use buildings are covered too. The rule applies whether units are occupied or vacant. The landlord resources page says non-owner-occupied single and double rental units register each year. It also says proactive rental inspections happen every three years. Inspectors look for health and safety hazards, including lead paint. Before renting, check whether the building needs registration, a rental compliance certificate, a certificate of occupancy, or a lead follow-up.
Buffalo’s rules are especially practical for small rental owners because the covered-building language reaches beyond big apartment houses. Non-owner-occupied singles and doubles can be part of the system, and vacant units are not automatically outside it. The three-year proactive inspection rhythm also means lead paint, safety hazards, and registration status should be part of ordinary ownership housekeeping. For tenants, the same information offers a concrete way to ask whether a unit has been kept inside the city’s rental process. In Buffalo, Rental Registration, Rental Compliance Certificate questions, Certificate of Occupancy questions, City inspection records, and lead-paint follow-up can all touch the same small building.