Lobbying in New York
13 organizations headquartered in New York with federal lobbying disclosures.
Organizations HQ'd in New York
Pfizer Inc
Pharmaceutical & Health Products · 8 policy areas · 36 lobbyists
Verizon Communications
Telecommunications · 7 policy areas · 30 lobbyists
JPMorgan Chase & Co
Finance & Banking · 7 policy areas · 22 lobbyists
Citigroup Inc
Finance & Banking · 6 policy areas · 17 lobbyists
Goldman Sachs
Finance & Banking · 6 policy areas · 17 lobbyists
IBM
Technology & Internet · 6 policy areas · 9 lobbyists
PepsiCo Inc
Retail & Consumer Products · 6 policy areas · 8 lobbyists
Morgan Stanley
Finance & Banking · 4 policy areas · 8 lobbyists
BlackRock Inc
Finance & Banking · 5 policy areas · 8 lobbyists
Regeneron Pharmaceuticals
Pharmaceutical & Health Products · 4 policy areas · 7 lobbyists
Mastercard
Finance & Banking · 5 policy areas · 6 lobbyists
MetLife Inc
Insurance · 5 policy areas · 5 lobbyists
American Express
Finance & Banking · 4 policy areas · 4 lobbyists
Frequently Asked Questions
LobbySpend tracks 13 organizations headquartered in New York with combined federal lobbying spending of $267.9M over the reporting period.
Pfizer Inc leads lobbying spending in New York with $54.4M in total reported expenditures, earning an Influence Score of B.
Organizations headquartered in New York lobby on 25 different policy areas. 58 registered lobbyists have former government positions (revolving door connections).
For this entity, the underlying data on this page comes from the Senate Lobbying Disclosure Office LD-2 filings. The breakdown above is the federal record; the paragraphs below add the per-entity context that makes the headline numbers usable for a real decision rather than just a data lookup.
Every number on this page links back to the Senate Lobbying Disclosure Office LD-2 filings; the methodology page describes the inputs, refresh cadence, and known limitations of the underlying data product.
Practical use of this page is in combination with the comparison and ranking pages elsewhere on the site, which surface the same data for this entity’s peers within U.S. lobbying activity. A single-entity reading without peer context can be misleading when an entity is an outlier on one axis but typical on another.
Source: U.S. Senate Lobbying Disclosure Act database, 2026.