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Medical Records Custodian Services in NYC: What Closing Practices Need to Know About Compliance and Retention

Medical Records Custodian NYC

Closing or relocating a medical practice in New York City is a major undertaking, one that involves far more than notifying patients, transferring equipment, or settling final billing. One of the most critical responsibilities that remains long after the doors close is the proper management, retention, and release of patient medical records.

Whether you are a solo practitioner retiring, a provider joining a hospital system, or a multisite NYC practice consolidating locations, you are legally responsible for ensuring patient records remain secure, accessible, and compliant long after your final day of operations.

This is why more practices across Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx, and Staten Island rely on professional Medical Records Custodian services to handle the long-term storage, compliance, and release-of-information needs that follow a closure or transition.

This article explains what NYC providers must know about custodianship, retention laws, compliance requirements, and what to look for when choosing a custodian.


New York has some of the strictest healthcare compliance expectations in the country, including retention requirements, privacy protections, and patient access rules. When a provider closes a practice, those responsibilities do not disappear.

A qualified medical records custodian:

  • Securely stores patient charts
  • Manages retention schedules according to NY law
  • Handles patient record requests
  • Provides copies to legal or insurance entities
  • Maintains HIPAA compliance
  • Documents all activity to protect the former provider

Without a custodian, a practice risks noncompliance, patient complaints, and legal exposure—issues that can arise years after closing.


New York State has strict retention rules that every closing practice must follow.

Records must be retained for at least 6 years from the date of the last patient encounter.

Records must be kept for at least 6 years, and until the patient turns 21, whichever is longer.

Retention periods may extend to 21–23 years depending on documentation type.

There are additional NYS DOH requirements that custodians must understand.

Retention rules differ and often require special handling and protections.

A medical records custodian ensures these laws are followed precisely so the practice remains compliant long after closure.


Some providers consider storing charts at home, in the office, or in a rented storage unit. These approaches are risky and often illegal.

  • No HIPAA-compliant access controls
  • No chain-of-custody documentation
  • No secure release-of-information process
  • Limited protection from fire, theft, or water damage
  • No backup system
  • No process for retention tracking or destruction
  • Difficulty responding to patient requests promptly

HIPAA violations can cost $10,000–$50,000 per incident, and patients can file complaints for inaccessible records.

A professional custodian eliminates these risks.


A qualified NYC custodian performs several critical functions:


Custodians store records (paper or digital) in:

  • HIPAA-compliant facilities
  • Climate-controlled environments
  • Monitored and access-controlled spaces

NYC practices often face added risks like limited office storage, building restrictions, and high rent, making professional storage essential.

Patients frequently need copies long after a practice closes for:

  • Continuing care
  • School requirements
  • Insurance claims
  • Legal matters
  • Personal records

A custodian handles:

  • Identity verification
  • Authorization processing
  • Electronic or physical delivery
  • Logging each request for compliance

This protects the former provider from HIPAA violations.

NYC providers often receive requests from:

  • Attorneys
  • Insurers
  • Workers’ compensation cases
  • Government agencies

Custodians ensure:

  • Proper authorization
  • Secure document delivery
  • Fee transparency
  • Full audit trails

This process shields the closed practice from mishandling or accidental disclosures.

Custodians track:

  • Retention timelines
  • Expiration dates
  • Destruction schedules

Once records reach the end of their legal life, the custodian handles secure destruction and issues certificates of destruction.

Many closing practices choose to:

  • Scan charts before custody
  • Move records into EMRs for easier access
  • Reduce long-term storage costs
  • Improve patient request turnaround times

Digitization is especially valuable in NYC where space is limited and hybrid provider teams are common.


Custodianship is required or strongly recommended in the following situations:

The most common scenario. Providers must ensure continuous record access for years beyond closure.

If the new practice or hospital does not assume all historical records, a custodian must retain them.

Providers moving out of state often cannot manage NY record retention requirements remotely.

When partners split, a third-party custodian ensures neutrality and compliance.

NYC practices frequently merge or relocate to reduce overhead; historical records remain in custody.

Custodians can step in quickly to maintain continuity and prevent compliance gaps.


Choosing the right custodian is essential for protecting both the provider and the patient population.

Here are the most important criteria:

A custodian must understand:

  • HIPAA Privacy Rule
  • New York retention requirements
  • NY SHIELD Act
  • 42 CFR Part 2 (behavioral health)
  • NYC-specific documentation rules (for certain specialties)

NYC practices vary widely in technology adoption. A good custodian must:

  • Store paper safely
  • Manage EMR data
  • Scan and digitize charts when needed

Patients should have:

  • A convenient request portal
  • Email and phone support
  • Clear instructions
  • Reasonable turnaround times

Poor service will lead to patient complaints, reflecting back on the former practice.

Providers should receive:

  • A clear custody fee schedule
  • Per-request fees
  • Storage costs
  • Destruction costs
  • Optional digitization pricing

Avoid custodians who:

  • Hide fees
  • Offer unclear retention terms
  • Do not provide documentation

Providers should confirm:

  • Records are barcoded
  • Movement is tracked
  • All actions are logged
  • Access is restricted
  • Requests include full audit trails

Given NYC’s density and risk profile, a custodian should offer protection against:

  • Fire
  • Water damage
  • Power outages
  • Cybersecurity threats

The custodian should understand the unique challenges of NYC operations, including:

  • Building access and logistics
  • High-volume records
  • Multi-location transitions
  • Complex specialty practices

A professional custodian follows a structured, compliant process:

Your charts are inventoried, counted, and categorized.

Records are barcoded, boxed, and transported securely from your office.

Depending on your needs:

  • Paper records are stored securely
  • Charts can be scanned into digital formats

NY practices may need to notify patients of the custodian’s contact information.

Patients, attorneys, and insurers contact the custodian directly, not the provider.

The custodian monitors timelines and manages destruction at the appropriate time.


NYC providers overwhelmingly choose custodians for three reasons:

Eliminates the risk of HIPAA complaints, state investigations, or improper disclosure.

Providers can retire or relocate without ongoing administrative responsibilities.

Patients receive timely, professional access to their records.


For any medical practice closing or transitioning in New York City, choosing a qualified medical records custodian is not optional; it is essential for compliance, patient care continuity, and long-term liability protection.

A reliable custodian ensures:

  • Secure storage
  • Proper retention
  • Efficient patient access
  • Full HIPAA and NYS compliance
  • Peace of mind long after the last patient visit

Emerald Document Imaging offers HIPAA-compliant medical record custodial services tailored to New York’s unique regulatory and operational environment, supporting retiring providers, relocating practices, multisite groups, and organizations undergoing mergers or acquisitions.

Explore our Medical Records Custodian Services today →

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