Eviction notice period in New Jersey

How much notice a landlord must give before filing to evict in New Jersey, by reason. General information, not legal advice — local city rules can override.

Nonpayment of rent (pay or quit)0 (private housing) / 14 (subsidized)
No-cause (month-to-month)Prohibited — good cause required
Lease violation (cure or quit)Varies by ground

New Jersey note: The Anti-Eviction Act bars no-cause eviction for nearly all residential tenants — a landlord must prove one of ~18 statutory good causes. Source: N.J.S.A. 2A:18-61.1.

Got an eviction notice? Check it

Paste the eviction or lease-termination notice (or upload a photo) for an instant read on whether it's a proper legal notice or an improper / illegal one.

🔒 Nothing you submit is stored.

What to do if you got an eviction notice in New Jersey

True in every state

FAQ

How much notice does a landlord have to give in New Jersey?

In New Jersey the standard notice is 0 (private housing) / 14 (subsidized) for nonpayment of rent and Prohibited — good cause required to end a month-to-month tenancy with no cause. Local rent-control or just-cause ordinances can require longer notice, and the notice for a lease violation differs again.

Can a landlord evict you without notice in New Jersey?

Generally no — proper written notice, correctly served, is a prerequisite, and an eviction notice is only step one. A landlord still has to file an eviction case and win in court before a sheriff can remove you. Lockouts and utility shutoffs are illegal everywhere.

Is an eviction notice the same as being evicted in New Jersey?

No. The notice just starts the clock. If you don't move or cure, the landlord must sue and get a court order — only a sheriff or marshal with that order can actually remove you, and you can raise defenses at the hearing.