New York Porch

Rules & Licenses · New York City

Bronx Community Boards Start With the Boundary Map

A Bronx address can fall into a specific community district, and official boundary tools help route local questions cleanly.

Published July 5, 2026 · Last verified July 5, 2026

A Bronx address has a community district, and the district is often the doorway for local public-process questions. NYC’s community board lookup and NYC311 both point people to an address-based check instead of a guess from neighborhood name alone.

Community boards handle local land use, street, service, and neighborhood-quality issues before many of them become citywide fights. For a renter, owner, organizer, or small business, the right district number keeps emails, testimony, and service follow-up from drifting to the wrong office.

The habit is address, district, office. A few blocks can change the community board, so save the district number with the exact address. Later calls, emails, agenda searches, and meeting records are easier to track when that number is already in the file.

This can feel odd in the Bronx because neighborhood names carry real meaning, but official boundaries are their own thing. Fordham, Belmont, Soundview, Riverdale, Mott Haven, and nearby blocks may be familiar by name while the city routes the public process by district.

Use the map version when you need a board office, agenda, land-use file, or meeting record.

Filed under: Rules & Licenses The Bronx bronxcommunity-boardscommunity-districtsnyc-boundarieslocal-government

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New York Porch explains the useful version; official sources decide the final answer.

Last reviewed
July 5, 2026

Use this carefully: Hours, fees, forms, rules, and local conditions can change. Confirm with the official source before acting.

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