Turnover lead inspections — required before you re-rent.
NYC Local Law 1 requires a lead-paint inspection at every tenant turnover in a pre-1960 multiple dwelling — before the unit is re-rented. The inspection identifies any lead-paint hazards needing remediation between tenancies. Envirex performs same-week turnover XRF inspections and coordinates the friction-surface remediation and clearance so units re-rent on schedule.
What the turnover rule requires.
Under Local Law 1 of 2004, an owner of a pre-1960 multiple dwelling must, at every tenant turnover:
- Perform a lead-paint inspection of the unit;
- Remediate any identified lead-paint hazards using EPA Lead-Safe Certified contractors and lead-safe work practices;
- Perform post-remediation dust-wipe clearance;
- Document the inspection, remediation and clearance — and retain the records for at least 10 years;
- Provide the new tenant with the required lead notice and disclosure.
The turnover inspection is a separate obligation from the annual Local Law 1 investigation, even when the annual investigation was recently completed for the same unit. It runs whether or not a child under six will reside in the new tenancy.
What an Envirex turnover engagement covers.
Typical turnover scope:
- Same-week scheduling. Most turnover inspections are scheduled within 3–5 business days of intake.
- Calibrated XRF survey. Component-by-component reading of every painted surface in the unit by an EPA-certified inspector. See XRF Inspections.
- Friction-surface assessment. Special attention to window stools, troughs, sashes and doors — the surfaces most likely to deteriorate between tenancies.
- Field-level remediation scope. If lead-bearing surfaces requiring remediation are identified, we scope the work on-site — encapsulation, replacement, or full abatement, depending on the surface and the condition.
- Remediation execution. Performed by an EPA Lead-Safe Certified Firm with proper containment and worker protection. Typical friction-surface scope completes in 1–3 days.
- Post-remediation clearance. Independent dust-wipe clearance against current EPA thresholds before the unit is re-keyed.
- Documentation package. Turnover inspection report, remediation records, clearance results — built to satisfy LL1 recordkeeping and ready for HPD audit.
Typical turnover timeline.
- Day 0. Outgoing tenant vacates, unit access granted.
- Day 1–3. Turnover XRF inspection performed.
- Day 4. Inspection report delivered; remediation scope (if any) and quote sent same day.
- Day 5–7. If remediation triggered: contractor mobilization and execution.
- Day 8–10. Independent dust-wipe clearance and lab turn.
- Day 11. Documentation package finalized, unit cleared for re-rental.
Units with no required remediation (clean XRF) re-key the day after the inspection report. The 7–10 day timeline applies only to units with friction-surface or other lead-bearing components requiring work.
Common turnover scenarios.
- Standard same-tenant-type re-rental. Inspection runs, friction surfaces remediated if needed, unit cleared. Typical 5–10 day total when remediation is required.
- Re-rental to a family with a child under six. Same inspection, but downstream LL1 annual investigation cycle begins. Coordination of the turnover record into the annual file matters.
- Major renovation between tenancies. Renovation triggers EPA RRP rules in addition to the turnover inspection requirement. Both can be coordinated into a single scoped engagement.
- Long-vacant unit being re-rented. Friction surfaces have often degraded over the vacancy; the inspection scope is typically deeper.
If the turnover inspection was skipped.
If a unit was re-rented without a turnover inspection and the gap is later identified — often by HPD inspection in response to a tenant complaint — the result is typically a Class B or Class C lead violation. The HPD Lead Violation Closure workflow applies. Catching the gap during owner self-audit, before HPD inspects, materially reduces exposure: a self-reported and corrected gap typically doesn't generate a violation.
Turnover lead inspections — common questions.
Does the turnover inspection apply to 1- and 2-family owner-occupied homes?
What if the recent LL31 inspection covered this unit?
How fast can you schedule a turnover inspection?
What if the unit fails dust-wipe clearance?
Can we package multiple turnovers into one engagement?
Related landing pages.
Local Law 1
Annual investigation cycle — the parent framework for turnover inspections.
View details NYC HPDLocal Law 31
One-time XRF inspection — establishes the baseline used at turnover.
View details NYC HPDHPD Lead Violation Closure
If a missed turnover inspection produced a violation.
View details ServiceXRF Inspections
The testing modality used at turnover.
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