See how the Mayor's plan helps your household.

Cheaper childcare. Frozen rent. Free buses. Higher wages. The platform reaches every household a little differently. Tell us about yours and see how it shows up where you live.

An independent civic project, built for New Yorkers. Not affiliated with the Mayor's Office or any campaign.

What you voted for

The headline numbers

$6B/yr
Universal childcare
6 weeks – 5 years
0%
Rent freeze
~1M stabilized units
$30/hr
Minimum wage
By 2030, up from $16.50
200Kunits
Affordable housing
Over the next decade
Your household

How the plan reaches you

A one-minute profile, then a clear picture of where each policy lands in your life: what it covers, what it changes, what it adds up to over the term.

Annual impact
$25,000/yr
That's $100,000 across the four-year term, summed across the 1 policy that apply to your household.
Policy by policy
Where each piece of the plan lands for your household
Freeze the rent
Doesn't apply. RGB only sets rents on stabilized units. ~1M NYC apartments qualify.
/yr
No-cost childcare (0–5)
1 kid age 0–5 × ~$25,000/yr (NYC center average)
$25,000
/yr
Universal Pre-K & 3-K
No school-age kids in your household.
/yr
Fast, fare-free buses
Doesn't apply. Your commute isn't bus-based.
/yr
$30/hr minimum wage by 2030
Set your hourly wage to model this.
/yr
Year-by-year
Year 1
$25,000
Year 2
$25,000
Year 3
$25,000
Year 4
$25,000
Cumulative$100,000
Top policies for your household
Platform pledges, not enacted policy. Modeled benefits assume the platform is implemented as proposed. The rent freeze depends on Rent Guidelines Board votes; childcare, minimum wage, and revenue-side measures require Albany action; fare-free buses require MTA cooperation. Rates and timing aren't finalized.
Different people, different impact

How the plan lands across the community

From retirees in stabilized apartments to working families to minimum-wage earners, every kind of household has something to gain. The plan is built to meet New Yorkers where we live: rent stability for tenants, childcare and pre-K for parents, a wage floor that lifts the lowest-paid. A stronger city, for every borough.

Elderly renter, fixed income
Lower East Side · 1 adult 65+ · stabilized · $1,700/mo · Social Security
$12,106
over 4 years
Minimum-wage worker, no kids
Bushwick · 1 adult · market-rate · $1,900/mo · $17/hr retail
$56,875
over 4 years
Single parent, food service
South Bronx · 1 adult · 1 kid 0–5 + 1 school-age · stabilized · $1,300/mo · $18/hr
$208,498
over 4 years
Family of four, mixed earners
Flatbush · 2 adults · 1 kid 0–5 + 1 school-age · market-rate · $1,600/mo · $24 + $21/hr
$196,400
over 4 years
Couple, no kids, white-collar
Williamsburg · 2 adults · stabilized · $2,800/mo · above min wage
$10,387
over 4 years
Make it real

Help turn the plan into law

The plan above doesn't pass on its own. Public testimony, comment periods, and Council pressure are how a campaign platform becomes city policy.