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New Jersey Updated 2026-04-01

New Jersey Rent Increase Laws (2026)

No statewide cap, but ~100 NJ municipalities have rent control. 30-day notice + reasonableness requirement statewide.

Statute: NJSA 2A:42-6.1 + local ordinances

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Not ready to talk? Get a free rental audit. This guide is general information, not legal advice.

No statewide cap

NJ has no state rent cap, but courts have held increases must be "reasonable" (not unconscionable) — typically interpreted as ≤ CPI +/- a few points.

Local rent control

~100 NJ municipalities have rent control: Newark, Jersey City, Elizabeth, Paterson, Hoboken, etc. Caps vary 2-6% annually + CPI components. Always check local rules.

Notice requirements

Month-to-month: 30 days written notice. Quarterly tenancy: 1 quarter notice. Yearly: 3 months. Fixed-term: only at renewal.

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Proprietio for New Jersey

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  • Detects local rent-control jurisdictions (Newark, Jersey City, Hoboken, etc.)
  • Computes the 30-day or 60-day notice based on tenancy length
  • Tracks the unconscionable-increase test for non-rent-controlled units

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Not legal advice. Proprietio is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. The content on this page is informational and was researched from publicly available statutes and case law, but state and local landlord-tenant rules change frequently and vary by jurisdiction. For specific situations in New Jersey, consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction. Read full disclaimer.