2025 AMI Cheat Sheet: New Housing is Not Affordable to the Majority of New Yorkers

2025 AMI Cheat Sheet: New Housing is Not Affordable to the Majority of New Yorkers

The AMI Cheat Sheet shows maximum household incomes and rents for three-person households, using 2025 AMI calculations, and estimates the share of renter households and rent-burdened households at each AMI level in New York City.

By: Itzamna Huerta

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Click here to view the 2025 AMI Cheat Sheet

ANHD’s 2025 AMI Cheat Sheet highlights the continued and urgent need for deeply affordable housing to serve the majority of NYC renters. As we approach the mayoral election this November, it’s more critical than ever that the next mayor implement a housing plan focused on deep affordability – one of the central pillars of ANHD’s Mayoral Platform. Since 2000, the city’s steady rent increases reveal how expensive New York has become and how unaffordable it is to cover living expenses. Fair market rent for a 2-bedroom apartment has nearly tripled since 2000, underscoring a relentless upward trend.1 Yet, we continue to see a consistent lack of attention paid to those households that need affordable housing the most.

ANHD’s AMI Cheat Sheet shows maximum household incomes and maximum affordable rents for three-person households, using 2025 AMI calculations, and estimates the share of renter households and rent-burdened households at each AMI level in New York City. This year’s findings reinforce the persistent trends that remain the bedrock of our current crisis, underscoring the ongoing disconnect between “affordable” housing and the needs of the communities that rely on it most.

Three issues continue to stand out:

  • The majority of the affordable housing crisis is concentrated among the lowest-income New Yorkers.
  • Rent burden is pervasive—and most severe—where the system provides the least support.
  • Deeply affordable housing serving lower AMI households is still not being produced at the scale needed, leaving a widening gap for those most in need.

The data reinforces what housing advocates have long known: the crisis is rooted in the same enduring failures to create deeply affordable housing, and until they are directly confronted, New Yorkers most in need will continue to be left out.

Footnotes:

1 Two-bedroom units were chosen for this analysis as they offer a clearer picture of affordability for working families and shared households, where housing pressures are often the most visible.

2 This figure only includes units at or below 80% AMI built in 2024.

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