Evidence for Your Security Deposit Case (NY)

Learn what evidence actually helps you recover a security deposit in New York, including photos, receipts, messages, and move-out records.

Evidence for Your Security Deposit Case

If you’re trying to get your security deposit back, this is where a lot of cases are won or lost.

Not because of complicated law—but because of what you can actually show.

The renter with clearer proof usually has the stronger position.


Why Evidence Matters

Most disputes come down to a simple question:

Was this actual damage, or just normal use?

Your landlord might say one thing. You might say another.

Evidence is what makes that difference clear.

If you end up sending a demand letter—or going further—your documentation is what supports your timeline and your version of events.

If you’re not sure what counts as damage vs normal use:

👉 See: Normal Wear and Tear in NY


What Actually Helps (Focus on This)

You don’t need perfect documentation.

You need clear, basic proof.

The most useful things are:

That’s it. Simple beats complicated here.


What to Photograph Before You Leave

If you’re about to move out—or helping someone who is—this matters.

Take photos of:

Take both:

👉 Full prep: Move-Out Checklist


The Best Evidence Is Usually Simple

You don’t need a report. You don’t need perfect lighting.

Strong examples look like:

That’s usually enough to tell the story.


How to Organize It (So It’s Actually Useful)

Don’t leave everything scattered.

Put it in one place, like:

Name things clearly so you can find them later.

If you need to send a letter—or show this to a court—this makes a big difference.


Common Mistakes

These come up all the time:

You don’t need perfect evidence—you just need enough to clearly show what happened.


What Helps Most With Bad Deductions

If your landlord is claiming damage, the most useful counter-evidence is:

👉 Compare here: What Can a Landlord Deduct in NY?


What to Do After You Have Everything

Once your evidence is together, the next step is usually straightforward.

You use it to support a clear request—most often a demand letter.

👉 Start here if your deposit wasn’t returned:
Deposit Not Returned

👉 Or go straight to:
Security Deposit Demand Letter


TL;DR

If you want to protect your deposit (or get it back), focus on this:

You can do all of this yourself using the steps above.

If you want it already organized—what to document, how to use it, and how it fits into the next steps—the system just puts everything together so you don’t have to think through it piece by piece.

👉 /new-york/toolkit/


Prevention Overview

If you’re earlier in the process:

👉 Start here: How to Avoid Security Deposit Problems in NY


Related Pages


Important

This page provides general educational information and is not legal advice.