New Jersey Habitability Law at a Glance
Governing Statute
N.J. Stat. § 2A:42-85 et seq. — Implied Warranty of Habitability
Cure Deadline
After written notice, your landlord has 14 days to repair habitability violations before you may exercise remedies.
Available Remedies
- Rent Withholding: Marini v. Ireland (1970); N.J. Stat. § 2A:42-85
- Repair-and-Deduct: Up to reasonable cost (Marini v. Ireland (1970))
- Lease Termination: If violations are not cured within 14 days
- Rent Abatement: Proportional to diminished habitability
- Civil Damages: actual damages, rent abatement, repair-and-deduct, treble damages for retaliation
- Code Enforcement: contact local building/housing inspector
Key Facts
- Required notice: written
- Retaliation protection: Yes (N.J. Stat. § 2A:42-10.10)
- Constructive eviction: Recognized
- Small claims limit: $5,000
Habitability Standards
compliance with building, housing, and health codes; plumbing, heating, electrical, sanitary, structural, pest-free
What Your New Jersey Demand Letter Includes
Every letter is built from New Jersey's actual statute — not a generic template.
Exact Warranty Statute
N.J. Stat. § 2A:42-85 et seq. cited by section number. Your landlord sees you know the law.
Cure Deadline
14 days from written notice, referenced so your landlord knows the clock is ticking.
Available Remedies
actual damages, rent abatement, repair-and-deduct, treble damages for retaliation — so your landlord knows the cost of inaction.
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Facing Eviction for Withholding Rent?
If your landlord tries to evict you for asserting your habitability rights, you may have a retaliation defense. Generate a response letter citing your state's anti-retaliation statute.
Eviction Response Letter Generator →New Jersey Habitability FAQ
What is the warranty of habitability in New Jersey?
Under N.J. Stat. § 2A:42-85 et seq. (Implied Warranty of Habitability), landlords in New Jersey are required to maintain rental properties in habitable condition. This includes compliance with building, housing, and health codes; plumbing, heating, electrical, sanitary, structural, pest-free. If conditions become uninhabitable, tenants have legal remedies.
How long does my New Jersey landlord have to fix habitability issues?
After receiving written notice, your landlord has 14 days to cure habitability violations under N.J. Stat. § 2A:42-85 et seq.. If repairs are not made within this period, you may exercise available remedies.
What remedies do I have if my New Jersey landlord won't make repairs?
Under New Jersey law, tenants may pursue: rent withholding, repair-and-deduct (up to reasonable cost), lease termination, rent abatement, civil damages. A formal demand letter citing the specific statute is the critical first step.
Can my landlord retaliate against me for complaining about habitability in New Jersey?
No. Under N.J. Stat. § 2A:42-10.10, landlords in New Jersey are prohibited from retaliating against tenants who assert their habitability rights. Retaliation includes raising rent, decreasing services, or threatening eviction.
Can I sue my landlord over habitability issues in New Jersey?
Yes. New Jersey small claims court handles cases up to $5,000. Habitability disputes are common small claims cases. You should first send a demand letter to document your complaint and give the landlord an opportunity to cure.
Do I need a lawyer to send a habitability demand letter in New Jersey?
No. A demand letter is a formal written notice, not a lawsuit. You can send one yourself. Our tool generates a New Jersey-specific demand letter citing N.J. Stat. § 2A:42-85 et seq. with your exact violations, cure deadline, and available remedies.
Habitability Demand Letters by State
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