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New Jersey Eviction Process: Good Cause & Anti-Eviction Act

manage NJ's strict 'good cause' eviction requirements under the Anti-Eviction Act, including the 18 permissible grounds and court procedures.

Melvin Prince
4 min de lecture
Hitelesített Mar 2026United States flag
États-UnisNova JerseyExpulsionLlei anti-desnonamentConformité

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New Jersey's Anti-Eviction Act (N.J.S.A. 2A:18-61.1) makes the state one of the hardest places in America to evict a residential tenant. A landlord must prove "good cause" under one of approximately 18 enumerated statutory grounds. Simply wanting possession of your own property is not sufficient.

Notice to Cease
Required for lease violations
Notice to Quit/Demand for Possession
1 month (usually)
Eviction for Nonpayment
No prior notice required typically

The "Good Cause" Requirement

Unlike nearly every other state, New Jersey does not allow a landlord to simply decline to renew a lease and ask a tenant to leave. Even after a written lease expires, the tenancy automatically continues as a month-to-month arrangement, and the tenant can only be removed for a legally recognized reason.

Common Grounds for Eviction

GroundNotice Required
Non-payment of rentNo notice required before filing (unless habitual late payer)
Habitual late payment of rent30-Day Notice to Quit
Disorderly conduct3-Day Notice to Quit (after prior "Notice to Cease")
Willful property damage3-Day Notice to Quit
Continued violation of rules30-Day Notice to Quit (after "Notice to Cease")
Breach of lease covenant30-Day Notice to Quit
Owner-occupancy2-Month Notice + additional requirements
Building condemnation3-Month Notice

Non-Payment of Rent

For a first-time non-payment (where the landlord has not habitually accepted late payments), the landlord can file a complaint directly in court without first serving a Notice to Quit. However, the tenant has the right to pay all back rent plus court costs at any time before the court issues a final Warrant of Removal, which will dismiss the case entirely.

Self-Help is Illegal

A New Jersey landlord cannot change the locks, shut off utilities, remove a tenant's belongings, or take any other "self-help" action to force a tenant out. Only a judge can order a legal eviction, and only a court officer (not the landlord) can physically execute a lockout via a Warrant of Removal.

The Court Process

  1. File Complaint: The landlord files a Verified Complaint for Possession in the Superior Court's Special Civil Part (Landlord-Tenant section) in the county where the property is located.
  2. Trial: The court schedules a trial date (typically within 10-30 days for non-payment cases).
  3. Judgment for Possession: If the court rules in the landlord's favor, a Judgment for Possession is issued.
  4. Warrant of Removal: The landlord applies for a Warrant of Removal. The court officer provides three business days' notice to the tenant before the physical lockout.

Entity Landlords Need Attorneys

If the rental property is owned by an LLC, corporation, or other legal entity, New Jersey requires the landlord to be represented by a licensed attorney. An unrepresented entity cannot file or argue an eviction case.

Protect Your Eviction Timeline Because New

Jersey's Anti-Eviction Act is unforgiving to procedural errors, a single misstep in your Notice to Quit or Complaint can result in dismissal and months of delay. Landager generates NJ-compliant eviction notices, tracks statutory timelines, and ensures every filing aligns perfectly with the 18 enumerated grounds.

Back to New Jersey Overview

Official Law Citation: Eviction procedures and acceptable "just causes" for removal are strictly governed by the New Jersey Anti-Eviction Act (N.J.S.A. 2A:18-61.1).

How Landager Helps

Landager tracks lease terms, compliance rules, and late fee schedules - making it easy to stay compliant with New Jersey regulations.

Back to New Jersey Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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