New Jersey Lease Requirements: Anti-Eviction Protections & Banned Clauses
Review NJ lease agreement rules, including prohibited clauses, automatic month-to-month renewal under the Anti-Eviction Act, and required provisions.
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New Jersey residential lease law is heavily shaped by the Anti-Eviction Act. Even if a written lease expires, the tenancy does not end-it automatically converts to a month-to-month arrangement under the same terms. This creates a unique legal situation where the lease is a powerful but evolving document.
Written vs. Oral Leases
While oral leases are legally recognized in New Jersey for tenancies of one year or less, a written lease is always strongly recommended. Under the NJ Statute of Frauds, any lease for a term exceeding one year must be in writing and signed by both parties to be enforceable.
Automatic Conversion After Expiration
Under the Anti-Eviction Act, when a written lease expires, the tenant does not lose their right to occupy the property. The tenancy automatically converts to a month-to-month tenancy under the same terms and conditions as the original lease. The landlord cannot refuse to renew the lease unless they can demonstrate one of the 18 enumerated "good cause" grounds for eviction.
This means a landlord cannot simply use a lease expiration as use to dramatically raise rent or force a tenant to accept unfavorable new terms. If the tenant objects to new terms offered at renewal, they can remain in the property under the old terms until the landlord pursues a valid "good cause" eviction.
Prohibited Lease Clauses New
Jersey law renders several lease provisions automatically void and unenforceable:
- Waiver of tenant rights under the Anti-Eviction Act.
- Confession of judgment clauses (where the tenant pre-agrees to a judgment against them in case of a dispute).
- Penalty clauses for exercising tenant rights (e.g., a fee for filing a complaint with a housing authority).
- Clauses waiving the implied warranty of habitability.
- Clauses permitting self-help eviction by the landlord.
Required Lease Provisions
While not all provisions are mandatory in the lease document itself, the landlord must ensure compliance with:
- Clear statement of the rent amount and due date.
- Identification of the landlord or authorized managing agent.
- Security deposit amount and banking details.
- Terms for renewal and rent increase notification.
Use Attorney-Reviewed Templates
Because the Anti-Eviction Act renders so many common landlord-favorable clauses unenforceable, drafting a NJ lease without specialized legal knowledge is a significant risk. Landager provides NJ-specific, attorney-reviewed lease templates that respect the Anti-Eviction Act's unique tenant protections while clearly defining all landlord rights.
Official Law Citation: In New Jersey, leases extending longer than three years must be in writing to be legally enforceable under the Statute of Frauds (N.J.S.A. 25:1-12).
How Landager Helps
Landager tracks lease terms, compliance rules, and late fee schedules - making it easy to stay compliant with New Jersey regulations.
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