Everything a landlord or tenant needs to know about New Jersey rental law: security deposit limits, notice periods, late fees, evictions, and required disclosures. Updated for 2026.
In New Jersey, the maximum security deposit a landlord can collect is 1.5 months' rent. After a tenant moves out, landlords have 30 days to return the deposit (minus any legitimate deductions for damage beyond normal wear and tear).
Interest on deposits: Required — bank rate for money market accounts.
Best practice: Provide an itemized statement of any deductions alongside the returned deposit. Most states require this, and it's your best defense if a tenant disputes charges. Document the unit condition with dated photos at both move-in and move-out.
These notice periods are statutory minimums. A lease can require more notice than the statute, but it can never require less. If your lease is silent on an issue, the state statute controls.
Late fee limit: No statewide limit (5 business day grace required).
Grace period: 5 business days required.
Late fees must be specified in the lease to be enforceable. A late fee that isn't written into the lease generally cannot be collected, even if the state allows it.
Local option — ~100 municipalities have rent control
Even without statewide rent control, individual New Jersey cities and counties may have local ordinances that regulate rent increases. Always check your municipality's rules before raising rent.
A New Jersey landlord must give 1 day (24 hours) of notice before entering a rental unit, except in emergencies.
Permitted reasons for entry:
New Jersey landlords must disclose the following in the lease or at lease signing:
Missing a required disclosure can give tenants grounds to break the lease or withhold rent — even if the underlying condition is fine. This is low-effort compliance worth getting right.
A typical uncontested eviction in New Jersey takes 2-4 months typical from filing to lockout, assuming the tenant doesn't answer or fight the case.
Contested evictions take significantly longer, especially if the tenant raises habitability defenses or claims retaliation. Self-help evictions (changing locks, shutting off utilities, removing belongings) are illegal in every state, including New Jersey.
Plain-English deep dives on the most-asked New Jersey rental law questions, with statutes, deadlines, and FAQs.
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