Money & Taxes · New York City
Staten Island Credits May Need a Refund Request
Staten Island owners with NYC property-tax credits should know when credits roll to the next bill and when a refund request is needed.
Published July 6, 2026 · Last verified July 6, 2026
A Staten Island property-tax credit is nice, but it does not always come back as a check by itself. NYC Finance says most property-tax credits are applied toward the next bill unless the owner asks for a refund.
That matters after an overpayment, a corrected assessment, or a property-tax exemption that gets applied after a bill was already sent. If the credit should come back to the person who paid it, the city points owners to the property refund request route and says to allow eight weeks for processing.
There is also a clock hiding in the background. NYC Finance says credit balances on a tax account must be used or refunded within six years. After six years, remaining credit balances become the property of the City of New York.
So do not let a credit line sit in a pile of old bills. For a Staten Island house, condo, or small building, keep the bill, payment proof, exemption notice or assessment-change notice, refund request, and confirmation together. And keep paying attention to the normal due dates. NYC also reminds property owners that taxes are still their responsibility even if they do not receive a bill.