NYC Business Compliance & Sustainability Guide, April 2026

Every NYC law your
business must follow.
All in one place.

Better Borough is a free compliance information directory for NYC small businesses. Enter your address and business type to see every law, agency requirement, and fine schedule that applies to you, sourced directly from city agencies.

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Sourced from DSNY · DEP · DOHMH · FDNY · DCA · DOB  |  April 2026  |  All results free

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Your Compliance Requirements

Sources: NYC Admin Code §§16-118–16-120–16-305–16-306.1–16-329–16-1000 et seq.; NYC Health Code §81; Admin Code §§17-322–17-1301–24-521; NYC Fire Code §607; NFPA 96; ADA 42 USC §12181; NYC Admin Code §§8-107–20-100 et seq.; NYC Zoning Resolution §32-60; Local Laws 11 (2019), 85 (2023), 116 (2023), 199 (2019); NYS Bag Law (2020). Fine ranges as of April 2026. For informational purposes only, not legal advice.
NYC Law Reference

Every NYC local law — explained clearly.

19 laws covering waste, energy, health, labor, and building safety. Each one broken down with compliance steps, fine schedules, charts, and interactive tools.

Browse All 19 Laws  →
Complete Law Reference

Every NYC law that affects
small businesses, explained.

Click any law to expand the full requirement: what it requires, who it applies to, exact fine amounts, required documentation, and step-by-step compliance actions. All citations link to official sources.

DSNY
Department of Sanitation
Waste management, recycling, organics, Commercial Waste Zones, sidewalk cleanliness
Local Law 199 of 2019  ·  nyc.gov/commercialwastezones ↗
Commercial Waste Zones, Authorized Hauler Requirement
Enacted 2019 · Rollout 2025–2027 · Enforced upon zone activation
Critical Risk Active (select zones)
What the law requires

NYC is divided into 20 Commercial Waste Zones. Once your zone is activated, you must contract with one of the DSNY-authorized haulers designated for your zone. You cannot use any other carter, even a BIC-licensed hauler you have used for years, once enforcement begins in your zone. The contract must be in writing and a signed copy kept on-site at all times. NYC Admin Code §16-1000 et seq.

Who it applies to
All commercial businesses generating trade waste in an active CWZ
Restaurants, bars, retail, offices, gyms, salons, warehouses, every business type
Does NOT apply to residential buildings or city-served residential waste
Penalties
Using wrong hauler (zone violation)$4,000–$10,000 per violation
No written contract on file$2,000–$5,000
Hauler operating without zone authorization$10,000+ (carter, not business)
Repeat violations (within 12 months)Doubled fine + potential suspension
What you need to do
  • 1Go to nyc.gov/commercialwastezones and enter your address to find your zone and its status.
  • 2If your zone is active: identify the 3 authorized carters for your zone on the DSNY portal. all three for quotes.
  • 3Sign a written service agreement with your chosen authorized carter. Do not rely on verbal agreements.
  • 4Keep a signed copy of the contract on-site (not in the cloud, not at home, at the location).
  • 5If your zone is pending: continue your current BIC-licensed carter but prepare a transition plan now. DSNY provides at least 6 months notice before enforcement starts.
Local Law 85 of 2023  ·  NYC Admin Code §16-306.1  ·  DSNY Organics ↗
Organic Waste Separation (Mandatory Composting)
Enacted 2023 · Effective for all businesses · Enforcement ongoing
Standard Active
What the law requires

All food service establishments and covered businesses must separate organic waste, food scraps, food-soiled paper, and yard waste, from regular trash. Organics must be placed in a designated container for DSNY curbside collection or contracted to a licensed private organics hauler. Contamination (non-organic items in the organics bin) is also a violation.

Who it applies to
All food service establishments: restaurants, cafes, bars, bakeries, delis, grocery stores
Hotels with food service operations
Any business generating more than 100 lbs of organic waste per week
Penalties
First offense$25
Second offense$50
Third and subsequent$100 per violation
Contamination (wrong items in organics bin)$25–$100
What you need to do
  • 1Get a clearly labeled organics bin (brown or green is recommended) for food scraps, food-soiled paper, coffee grounds, and eggshells.
  • 2Set out the organics container on your DSNY collection day, DSNY picks up organics with the recycling collection.
  • 3Train all staff: what goes in organics (food scraps, soiled napkins, pizza boxes, fruit peels) vs. what does not (plastic, glass, metal).
  • 4If using a private hauler, confirm they are BIC-registered for organics collection and obtain a service contract.
Local Law 116 of 2023  ·  NYC Admin Code §16-120  ·  Effective March 2024
Containerized Trash, No Loose Bags on the Curb
Enacted 2023 · Effective March 2024 · Enforced citywide
Standard Active
What the law requires

All commercial businesses must place trash in sealed, rigid, lidded containers, not in loose black plastic bags placed directly on the curb or sidewalk. Bags inside containers are fine; loose bags placed outside are a violation. The rule applies at all times, including set-out windows.

Who it applies to
All commercial businesses in NYC without exception
Applies regardless of trash volume or business type
Penalties
First offense (bags on curb)$50–$100
Second offense within 12 months$300
Repeat violations$500+
Setting out trash before allowed time$100–$300 (separate violation)
What you need to do
  • 1Purchase or lease rigid, lidded containers. Standard sizes up to 55 gallons work. Wheeled carts and receptacles with handles are fine.
  • 2Set out containers, not loose bags, on your scheduled DSNY collection day.
  • 3Verify your district's exact set-out hours at dsny.nyc.gov. Setting out too early is a separate violation. General rule: not before 8pm the evening before collection.
Local Law 11 of 2019  ·  NYC Admin Code §16-329  ·  NYS Bag Law 2020
Single-Use Plastics & Foam Ban
Foam ban effective 2019 · Plastic bag ban effective 2020 · Enforced by DSNY & DOHMH
High Risk Active
What the law requires

New York City bans expanded polystyrene (EPS/foam/styrofoam) food service containers, cups, and packaging. The New York State Bag Law bans single-use plastic carryout bags. Additional restrictions apply to plastic straws (provide only on request), plastic stirrers, and certain plastic cutlery. Violations are issued by DSNY inspectors and by DOHMH during routine food service inspections.

Who it applies to
All food service establishments: restaurants, cafes, bars, food carts, delis
Retail stores providing carryout bags
Grocery stores, bodegas, and delis
Hotels with food service or concierge bag provision
Penalties
Foam container, first offense$250
Foam container, repeat offenses$500 per violation
Plastic bag, first offense$250
Plastic bag, repeat offenses$500 per violation
What you need to do
  • 1Audit your current supply inventory. Eliminate all foam/polystyrene containers, cups, clamshells, plates, and food trays.
  • 2Replace foam items with paper, cardboard, or DSNY-approved compostable alternatives from a restaurant supply distributor.
  • 3Replace plastic carryout bags with paper bags. You must charge customers a $0.05 paper bag fee and may retain it. Alternatively, encourage reusable bags.
  • 4Straws: provide only on request. Do not pre-set plastic straws on tables. Paper, bamboo, or compostable alternatives are fine to pre-set.
NYC Admin Code §16-305  ·  DSNY Recycling Program
Mandatory Recycling Stream Separation
Long-standing requirement · Updated enforcement rules 2023
Standard Active
What the law requires

All businesses must separate recyclables from regular trash. Recyclables include glass bottles and jars, metal cans and foil, plastic bottles and containers, cardboard, and paper. Cardboard must be flattened and bundled separately. Inspectors check during routing hours.

Penalties
Failure to separate recyclables, first offense$25
Subsequent offensesUp to $100 per violation
Cardboard not flattened or bundled$25–$100
What you need to do
  • 1Maintain three separate waste streams: (1) glass, metal, plastic; (2) cardboard and paper; (3) regular trash.
  • 2Flatten all cardboard before set-out. Don't stuff unflattened boxes into bins.
  • 3Verify your district's recycling collection schedule, it may differ from your trash day.
  • 4Post a simple recycling guide visible to all staff at your waste station.
NYC Admin Code §16-118  ·  DSNY Enforcement Rules
Sidewalk Cleanliness & Set-Out Time Rules
Ongoing enforcement · Set-out times updated 2023
Standard Active
What the law requires

Businesses are responsible for keeping the sidewalk immediately in front of their establishment clean, free of litter, and free of snow/ice within four hours of snowfall ending (or by 11am if snowfall ends after 7pm). Trash may only be placed at the curb during designated set-out hours.

Penalties
Dirty sidewalk / failure to sweep$50–$250
Trash set out before allowed time$100–$300
Failure to clear snow or ice$100–$350
Sidewalk obstruction without permit$250–$1,000
What you need to do
  • 1Sweep or clean the sidewalk in front of your establishment daily, before your business opens.
  • 2Check your district's exact set-out times at dsny.nyc.gov or by calling 311. General rule: no earlier than 8pm the evening before collection.
  • 3If you have outdoor seating or sidewalk displays, confirm you have the required DOT or DCA permit and that it's posted.
DEP
Department of Environmental Protection
Grease traps, cooking oil disposal, FOG control, hazardous materials
NYC Admin Code §24-521  ·  DEP FOG Control Program  ·  DEP Grease Page ↗
Grease Trap & Interceptor Maintenance, On-Site Records Required
Ongoing requirement · DEP inspection program active citywide
Critical Risk Active
What the law requires

All food service establishments with grease-producing operations must maintain a properly functioning grease trap or interceptor. DEP requires that cleaning manifests from a DEP-licensed pumper be kept physically on-site for a minimum of 3 years. Failure to produce records during an inspection is itself a violation, even if the trap was cleaned. You cannot simply show a phone screenshot or email receipt.

Who it applies to
All restaurants, bars, cafes, bakeries, delis, and grocery stores with cooking operations
Hotels with food service kitchens
Any establishment generating fats, oils, or grease discharged to the city sewer system
Penalties
Failure to maintain/clean grease trap$1,000–$10,000
Records not physically on-site during inspection$1,000–$5,000
Using an unlicensed pumper$2,500–$10,000
Discharge of grease to sewer$10,000+ and potential sewer cut-off
What you need to do
  • 1Clean your grease trap at minimum quarterly. High-volume cooking operations (more than 2 hours/day of frying) may require monthly cleaning.
  • 2Use ONLY a DEP-licensed grease trap pumper. Verify their license number against the DEP pumper directory before hiring.
  • 3Keep the paper pumper manifest (the receipt/certificate from each cleaning) physically at the location, in a binder, posted in the kitchen, or in your records filing area.
  • 4Maintain a 3-year rolling file. Every cleaning for the past 3 years must be on-site at all times.
  • 5If you don't have a grease trap and your establishment generates FOG, DEP immediately. Installation is required.
NYC Admin Code §17-322  ·  DEP FOG Program  ·  DOHMH Food Service Rules
Cooking Oil (Inedible Kitchen Grease) Disposal Records
Separate from grease trap requirement · Ongoing enforcement
High Risk Active
What the law requires

Used cooking oil (IKG, Inedible Kitchen Grease) is regulated separately from grease trap waste. Establishments with fryers, deep fryers, or any equipment generating used cooking oil must dispose of it through a BIC-licensed IKG hauler. Pouring used cooking oil down any drain, including floor drains and utility sinks, is illegal and triggers both DEP and DOHMH violations.

Penalties
Failure to use licensed IKG hauler$500–$2,000
Cooking oil poured down drain$2,500–$10,000 + DEP summons
IKG pickup manifests not on file$500–$1,500
What you need to do
  • 1Identify a BIC-licensed IKG hauler. This is completely separate from your grease trap pumper.
  • 2Arrange a regular pickup schedule. Your hauler will typically provide sealed containers for oil storage between pickups.
  • 3Get a manifest or receipt for every pickup. Keep on-site for at least 12 months.
  • 4Never pour used cooking oil down any drain, toilet, floor drain, or grease trap. Store in sealed containers until pickup.
NYC Environmental Protection Code  ·  FDNY Fire Code §2703  ·  6 NYCRR Part 360
Hazardous Materials Storage & Disposal
Applies to dry cleaners, nail salons, pharmacies, warehouses
Critical Risk Active
What the law requires

Businesses using or storing hazardous chemicals, including PERC (dry cleaning solvent), acetone, nail salon chemicals (ethyl acetate, methyl methacrylate), pharmaceutical waste, and industrial solvents, must comply with DEP storage, disposal, and spill reporting requirements. Storage above regulatory threshold quantities requires an FDNY chemical storage permit. Disposal must be through a licensed hazardous waste hauler. Improper disposal down any drain is a serious environmental violation.

Penalties
Improper hazmat disposal$2,500–$25,000
Unpermitted storage above threshold$1,000–$10,000
Unreported spill$5,000–$50,000
PERC violation (dry cleaners)$5,000–$50,000 + DEC action
What you need to do
  • 1Identify all chemicals used in your business and look up their regulatory status under NYC Environmental Code and FDNY Fire Code.
  • 2If you store chemicals above threshold quantities, apply for the required FDNY Chemical Storage Permit before storing.
  • 3Dispose of hazardous waste only through a licensed hazardous waste hauler. Keep all disposal manifests.
  • 4Dry cleaners using PERC must comply with NYC Air Code rules including vapor recovery system requirements and storage container standards.
DOHMH
Department of Health & Mental Hygiene
Food service permits, inspections, grading, plastics enforcement
NYC Health Code §81  ·  Admin Code §17-1301  ·  DOHMH Inspection Program ↗
DOHMH Food Service Permit & Inspection Program
Annual permit · Unannounced inspections · Grade posting required
Critical Risk Active
What the law requires

All food service establishments must hold a valid DOHMH food service establishment permit. DOHMH conducts unannounced inspections using a point-based grading system across temperature, hygiene, food handling, pest control, and facility conditions. Establishments receiving 0–13 points receive an A grade. 14–27 points receive a B. 28+ points receive a C. Grade letters must be posted in the front window at all times. Establishments that receive a B or C on initial inspection are re-inspected within 1 month. Certain violations, imminent health hazards, result in immediate closure orders.

Penalties
Operating without valid permit$1,000/day
Grade C / failure to re-inspect$600–$1,000
Critical food safety violations$300–$2,000+ per violation
Imminent health hazard closure order$1,000+ and forced closure
Grade letter not posted$1,000
What you need to do
  • 1Ensure your DOHMH permit is current and posted in a visible location near the entrance. Permits expire annually.
  • 2Post your current grade letter in the front window. A-grade establishments must post their A card; B and C establishments must post their grade during the cure period. This is legally required.
  • 3Use DOHMH's published inspection checklist to conduct regular self-inspections. Key focus areas: temperature logs, pest evidence, hand-washing stations, food handler hygiene.
  • 4Keep signed pest control service manifests on-site.
  • 5Use DOHMH's permit lookup at a816-healthpsi.nyc.gov to check your permit status and expiration date.
FDNY
Fire Department of New York
Kitchen hood cleaning, fire suppression systems, chemical storage permits
NFPA 96 Standard  ·  NYC Fire Code §607  ·  FDNY Contractor License ↗
Kitchen Hood & Exhaust Vent Cleaning, NFPA 96 Compliance
Ongoing requirement · FDNY enforcement · Cleaning sticker required on hood
High Risk Active
What the law requires

NFPA 96 (Standard for Ventilation Control and Fire Protection of Commercial Cooking Operations), adopted by NYC Fire Code §607, requires that commercial kitchen exhaust systems, hoods, plenums, ducts, and fans, be cleaned by a licensed company at intervals determined by the type and volume of cooking. After each cleaning, the service company must affix a dated sticker to the hood. All service records must be maintained on-site.

Required cleaning frequency
Monthly: Solid fuel cooking (wood, charcoal), high-volume wok cooking, 24-hour operations
Quarterly: Moderate-volume cooking (most full-service restaurants)
Semi-annually: Low-volume cooking, day use only
Annually: Seasonal, very low-volume, or single-shift cooking only
Penalties
Hood cleaning log not on-site$500–$1,000
Missing or expired cleaning sticker on hood$500
Grease buildup, fire hazard citation$1,000–$2,500
Operating with fire hazard after noticePotential shutdown order
What you need to do
  • 1Determine your required cleaning frequency based on your cooking type and volume using the NFPA 96 frequency table above.
  • 2Hire only a hood cleaning company with a valid FDNY Certificate of Fitness. Verify their license at the FDNY contractor lookup before hiring.
  • 3After each cleaning, confirm the company affixes a new dated sticker to the hood. If they don't provide a sticker, that is a red flag about their licensing.
  • 4Keep all service records (invoice and completion certificate) on-site for at least 2 years in a physical binder or folder.
DCA
Department of Consumer Affairs
Business licensing, price posting, advertising standards
NYC Admin Code §20-100 et seq.  ·  DCA License Checklist ↗
DCA Business License, Required for Many Business Types
Annual renewal · Must be posted in establishment · Pre-opening requirement
High Risk Active
Business types requiring DCA license
Laundromats and dry cleaners
Secondhand dealers (used goods, electronics, clothing)
Home improvement contractors
Electronics stores (some categories)
Pawnshops and ticket resellers
Parking lots and garages
Sidewalk cafes
Motion picture theaters
Penalties
Operating without required DCA license$500–$5,000 per violation
Price gouging or misleading advertising$500–$20,000
Prices not clearly posted (where required)$250–$1,000
What you need to do
  • 1Check the DCA license checklist at nyc.gov/dca for your specific business type before opening.
  • 2Apply for and receive the required license before you open. Do not operate and apply simultaneously.
  • 3Post the license in a clearly visible location in the establishment.
  • 4Renew annually. DCA sends renewal notices, but it is your legal responsibility to keep the license current.
  • 5Ensure prices are clearly posted if your business type requires price disclosure (salons, food establishments, etc.).
DOB / ADA
Department of Buildings & ADA Compliance
Signage permits, ADA accessibility, building code compliance
NYC Zoning Resolution §32-60  ·  NYC Building Code  ·  DCA Price Posting Rules
Business Signage, DOB Permit Requirements
Pre-installation permit required for most illuminated or projecting signs
Standard Active
What the law requires

Business signs must comply with the NYC Zoning Resolution's size, placement, and illumination rules for your zoning district. Permits are required for most new signs before installation. Landmark and historic districts have additional restrictions enforced by the Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC). Price posting is separately required by DCA for food service, salons, and other specified business types.

Penalties
Unpermitted illuminated or projecting sign$800–$5,000 + DOB stop-work order
LPC violation in landmark district$500–$10,000
Prices not posted (where required)$250–$1,000
What you need to do
  • 1Before installing any new sign, check with DOB whether a permit is required. Nearly all illuminated, projecting, or roof signs require a permit.
  • 2If your building is in a landmark district, the LPC before changing any exterior signage, even paint color.
  • 3Ensure prices are posted for food service, hair salons, and other DCA-covered business types.
ADA 42 USC §12181  ·  NYC Admin Code §8-107  ·  NYC Building Code §1101
ADA Accessibility, Places of Public Accommodation
Federal requirement (ADA) + NYC Human Rights Law · Renovation trigger thresholds apply
High Risk Active
What the law requires

All places of public accommodation (virtually all commercial businesses open to the public) must comply with the ADA and the NYC Human Rights Law, which is broader than the federal standard. This covers physical accessibility of entrances, paths of travel, restrooms, service counters, parking, and auxiliary aids for customers with disabilities. NYC Building Code §1101 additionally requires accessibility compliance for any renovation that exceeds a cost threshold (approximately 20% of the full replacement cost of the building).

Penalties
ADA violation, first federal complaint$75,000+
ADA violation, repeat federal complaint$150,000+
NYC Human Rights Law complaintUnlimited civil damages + attorney fees
DOB inaccessible renovation violation$1,000–$10,000 + correction order
What you need to do
  • 1Ensure your entrance is accessible. If a step or other barrier exists, consult a contractor about a ramp or lift. In the interim, post a sign directing customers to an accessible entry if one exists.
  • 2If restrooms are open to the public, at least one must be ADA-accessible (door width, turning radius, grab bars, etc.).
  • 3Customer-facing service counters should not exceed 36 inches in height, or an accessible-height section should be available.
  • 4Before any renovation, consult an ADA specialist. NYC's trigger thresholds are complex and renovation compliance requirements differ from new construction.
Commercial Waste Zone Guide

The biggest regulatory change
for NYC businesses in a generation.

Local Law 199 of 2019 divided New York City into 20 Commercial Waste Zones. Once your zone activates, you must contract with one of 3 authorized haulers, or face fines starting at $4,000 per violation.

Activation Timeline
January 2025
Queens Central, First Zone Active
First CWZ fully implemented and enforced. Businesses in Jackson Heights, Elmhurst, Woodside, Rego Park, Forest Hills, Maspeth, Middle Village required to use authorized carter.
ZIP codes: 11368–11385, 11416–11421, 11379, 11101
November 2025
Bronx East & Bronx West, Activated
Both Bronx zones activated simultaneously. DSNY reported 1,885 organics summonses in the first 7 days of enforcement alone across the Bronx zones.
Bronx East ZIPs: 10451–10465, 10469, 10472–10473  ·  Bronx West ZIPs: 10457–10458, 10466–10468, 10470–10471, 10474–10475
February 2026
Queens Northeast & Brooklyn South, Activated
Queens Northeast (Flushing, Bayside, Jamaica Estates) and Brooklyn South (Bay Ridge, Bensonhurst, Flatbush) now active. Enforcement ongoing.
Queens NE ZIPs: 11354–11367  ·  Brooklyn South ZIPs: 11204–11214, 11219–11220, 11223–11224, 11228–11230, 11232, 11235–11236, 11252
2026, Upcoming
Multiple Zones Pending Activation
Remaining Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, and Staten Island zones activating through 2026–2027. DSNY provides at least 6 months advance notice. Monitor the DSNY CWZ portal weekly.
End of 2027
All 20 Zones Active
Every commercial business in all five boroughs will operate under an active CWZ with mandatory authorized-hauler contracts.
Currently Active Zones
Queens Central Active
Queens
11368–11385, 11416–11421, 11379, 11101
Jackson Heights, Elmhurst, Woodside, Rego Park, Forest Hills, Maspeth, Middle Village
Bronx East Active
The Bronx
10451–10465, 10469, 10472–10473
South Bronx, Hunts Point, Longwood, Parkchester, Castle Hill
Bronx West Active
The Bronx
10457–10458, 10466–10468, 10470–10471, 10474–10475
Tremont, Fordham, Wakefield, Riverdale, Throgs Neck
Queens Northeast Active
Queens
11354–11367
Flushing, Bayside, Jamaica Estates, Fresh Meadows, Whitestone
Brooklyn South Active
Brooklyn
11204–11214, 11219–11220–11223–11230–11232, 11235–11236–11252
Bay Ridge, Bensonhurst, Borough Park, Flatbush, Brighton Beach
15 Remaining Zones Pending
All Boroughs
Manhattan, additional Brooklyn, Queens, Staten Island
Activating through 2027. Use current BIC-licensed carter until your zone goes live. Monitor nyc.gov/commercialwastezones for your zone's status.
Check Your Zone Now
Enter your address in the compliance lookup at the top of this page, or go directly to nyc.gov/commercialwastezones to see your zone status and authorized haulers.
Compliance by Neighborhood

CWZ status by borough
and neighborhood.

Commercial Waste Zone status varies by ZIP code across all five boroughs. Find your neighborhood to see if your zone is active, pending, or unassigned.

Jackson Heights / Elmhurst
11368–11369, 11373
Queens Central CWZ
✓ Active, contract required
Woodside / Sunnyside
11372–11374, 11101
Queens Central CWZ
✓ Active, contract required
Rego Park / Forest Hills
11374–11375
Queens Central CWZ
✓ Active, contract required
Maspeth / Middle Village / Ridgewood
11379–11385, 11416–11421
Queens Central CWZ
✓ Active, contract required
Flushing / Whitestone / Bayside
11354–11364
Queens Northeast CWZ
✓ Active, contract required
Fresh Meadows / Jamaica Estates
11365–11367
Queens Northeast CWZ
✓ Active, contract required
Jamaica / South Queens / Rockaway
11412–11436 (varies)
Zone TBD
⏳ Pending, check dsny.nyc.gov
Long Island City / Astoria
11102–11106
Zone TBD
⏳ Pending, check dsny.nyc.gov
Howard Beach / Ozone Park
11414–11416, 11417
Queens Central CWZ
✓ Active, contract required
South Bronx / Hunts Point
10451–10454, 10455
Bronx East CWZ
✓ Active, contract required
Mott Haven / Port Morris
10451–10452, 10454
Bronx East CWZ
✓ Active, contract required
Bronx Park / Parkchester
10460–10461, 10462
Bronx East CWZ
✓ Active, contract required
Castle Hill / Soundview
10459–10472, 10473
Bronx East CWZ
✓ Active, contract required
Fordham / Tremont / Belmont
10457–10458
Bronx West CWZ
✓ Active, contract required
Wakefield / Williamsbridge
10466–10467, 10469
Bronx West CWZ
✓ Active, contract required
Riverdale / Kingsbridge
10463–10471
Bronx West CWZ
✓ Active, contract required
Throgs Neck / City Island
10465–10475
Bronx East / West CWZ
✓ Active, contract required
Bay Ridge / Fort Hamilton
11209–11220
Brooklyn South CWZ
✓ Active, contract required
Bensonhurst / Bath Beach
11204–11214, 11228
Brooklyn South CWZ
✓ Active, contract required
Borough Park / Flatbush
11219–11230
Brooklyn South CWZ
✓ Active, contract required
Brighton Beach / Coney Island
11223–11224, 11235
Brooklyn South CWZ
✓ Active, contract required
Canarsie / East Flatbush
11229–11236
Brooklyn South CWZ
✓ Active, contract required
Sunset Park / Industry City
11220–11232
Brooklyn South CWZ
✓ Active, contract required
Downtown Brooklyn / DUMBO / Park Slope
11201–11215, 11217
Zone TBD
⏳ Pending, check dsny.nyc.gov
Williamsburg / Greenpoint / Bushwick
11206–11211, 11237
Zone TBD
⏳ Pending, check dsny.nyc.gov
Crown Heights / Bed-Stuy / Flatbush
11213–11216, 11225–11233
Zone TBD
⏳ Pending, check dsny.nyc.gov
Midtown / Midtown South
10001–10016, 10017–10018, 10036
Zone TBD
⏳ Pending, check dsny.nyc.gov
Lower Manhattan / Financial District
10004–10005, 10006–10007, 10038
Zone TBD
⏳ Pending, check dsny.nyc.gov
Upper East Side / Lenox Hill
10021–10022, 10065–10075
Zone TBD
⏳ Pending, check dsny.nyc.gov
Upper West Side / Morningside Heights
10023–10024, 10025
Zone TBD
⏳ Pending, check dsny.nyc.gov
Harlem / East Harlem
10027–10029, 10030–10037
Zone TBD
⏳ Pending, check dsny.nyc.gov
SoHo / Tribeca / West Village
10012–10013, 10014
Zone TBD
⏳ Pending, check dsny.nyc.gov
Chelsea / Hell's Kitchen
10001–10011, 10019
Zone TBD
⏳ Pending, check dsny.nyc.gov
Washington Heights / Inwood
10031–10040
Zone TBD
⏳ Pending, check dsny.nyc.gov

Manhattan zones are not yet activated as of April 2026. Monitor nyc.gov/commercialwastezones for activation dates.

St. George / New Brighton
10301–10302
Zone TBD
⏳ Pending, check dsny.nyc.gov
Stapleton / Port Richmond
10304–10302
Zone TBD
⏳ Pending, check dsny.nyc.gov
Tottenville / Great Kills
10307–10308
Zone TBD
⏳ Pending, check dsny.nyc.gov

Staten Island CWZ zones have not been activated as of April 2026. All businesses may continue with current BIC-licensed carters until zone implementation. Check dsny.nyc.gov for updates.

Agency Reference

Six agencies. One business.
Here's what each one wants.

Every NYC business is subject to multiple agencies simultaneously. Each one has different inspection schedules, enforcement priorities, and documentation requirements.

DSNY
Department of Sanitation
Waste containerization, recycling, composting, Commercial Waste Zones, sidewalk cleanliness, set-out times.
DEP
Dept. of Environmental Protection
Grease trap maintenance, cooking oil (IKG) disposal, FOG control, sewer protection.
DOHMH
Dept. of Health & Mental Hygiene
Food service permits, unannounced inspections, A/B/C grading, plastics enforcement, temperature and pest control.
FDNY
Fire Department of New York
Commercial kitchen hood and exhaust cleaning (NFPA 96), fire suppression, chemical storage permits.
DCA / DCWP
Dept. of Consumer Affairs
Business licenses for laundromats, secondhand dealers, home improvement contractors, and others. Price posting rules.
DOB / ADA
Dept. of Buildings & ADA
Sign permits, ADA accessibility requirements, renovation rules, certificate of occupancy.
Green Certifications

Turn compliance into credentials
that attract customers.

The Green Restaurant Association (GRA) offers a third-party certification for food service establishments that meet documented environmental standards. It is awarded independently by the GRA. The NYS DEC also provides green business resources and technical assistance for businesses looking to document and improve their environmental practices. The criteria below are published publicly and free to apply for.

GRA Green Restaurant Certification
The GRA is an independent nonprofit that certifies food service businesses meeting documented environmental standards across six categories. The certification is nationally recognized and posted in restaurant windows. NYC compliance requirements, including organics separation, foam bans, and recycling, directly overlap with GRA criteria — businesses already meeting city mandates are well positioned to apply.
  • Energy efficiency: LED lighting, ENERGY STAR equipment
  • Water conservation: low-flow fixtures, efficient dishwashing
  • Waste reduction: organics separation, composting, waste diversion
  • Sustainable food sourcing: local, seasonal, sustainably raised
  • Chemicals and pollution prevention: green cleaning, pest management
  • Disposables: elimination of foam and single-use plastics
GRA Certification Info ↗
DEC: Greening Your Business
The NYS DEC does not offer a formal "green certification" for private businesses, but provides free technical assistance and resources to help businesses reduce environmental impact and document their practices. This includes guidance on pollution prevention, hazardous waste reduction, energy efficiency, and connecting with programs like the NYS Pollution Prevention Institute. These resources are free to access.
  • Pollution prevention technical assistance via NYS P2 Institute
  • Hazardous waste reduction and proper disposal guidance
  • Energy efficiency resources for commercial operations
  • Water quality and FOG compliance support
  • Brownfield cleanup incentives for contaminated sites
DEC Business Resources ↗
Fine Reference

What non-compliance costs.
Agency fine schedules.

These are the published fine ranges from each agency's enforcement schedule, current as of April 2026. Fine amounts vary based on violation history, severity, and whether the business demonstrates good faith cure efforts.

DSNY — Sanitation violations
CWZ wrong hauler (per violation)$4,000–$10,000
No written CWZ contract on file$2,000–$5,000
Loose bags on curb (1st offense)$50–$100
Loose bags on curb (repeat)$300–$500+
Failure to separate recyclables$25–$100
Organics not separated (1st)$25
Foam container violation$250–$500
Dirty sidewalk$50–$250
Trash set out before allowed time$100–$300
DEP, DOHMH, FDNY, DOB violations
Grease trap not maintained$1,000–$10,000
Grease records not on-site$1,000–$5,000
Unlicensed grease pumper$2,500–$10,000
Grease discharged to sewer$10,000+ and sewer cutoff
DOHMH permit lapsed$1,000/day
DOHMH critical violation$300–$2,000+
FDNY hood records not on-site$500–$2,500
Hazmat disposal violation$2,500–$25,000
ADA violation (federal, 1st)$75,000+

Sources: DSNY Penalty Schedule (nyc.gov/ecb), DOHMH Health Code Chapter 23, DEP FOG enforcement schedule, FDNY Fire Code §607, ADA 42 USC §12181. Fine ranges as of April 2026. Not legal advice.

Official Resources

Go straight to the source.

Every link below goes directly to an official NYC agency page, open data portal, or regulatory document. No middleman, no login required.

DSNY
Sanitation
CWZ Zone Lookup + Authorized Carters → DSNY Penalty Schedule (PDF) → Organics / Composting Program → Containerization Rules → Set-Out Times by District → BIC Licensed Carter Database →
DEP
Environmental Protection
Grease Disposal for Businesses → Licensed Grease Pumper Directory → NYS DEC Hazardous Waste Rules →
DOHMH
Health Department
Restaurant Inspection Program → Permit Lookup + Status → Health Code Chapter 23 (PDF) → Settling Violations →
FDNY
Fire Department
Contractor License Lookup → NFPA 96 Standard → FDNY Permits + Licenses →
DCA / DOB
Licensing + Buildings
DCA License Checklist → DCA License Application → DOB Permit Portal → ADA Small Business Guide → Landmarks Preservation (LPC) →
Open Data + Law
Public Records + Code
NYC Open Data Portal → NYC Administrative Code → NYC Rules Monitor (proposed rules) → GRA Green Restaurant Certification → DEC: Greening Your Business →