How long your landlord has to return your deposit in New Jersey, and your leverage if they don't. General information, not legal advice — confirm the cited statute.
Deadline to return deposit
30 days
Penalty for wrongful withholding
Double the amount due + court costs and attorney's fees
Statute
N.J. Stat. § 46:8-21.1
New Jersey note: Deposit capped at 1.5 months' rent; doubling is mandatory, not discretionary. Source: N.J. Stat. § 46:8-21.1.
Got a deposit deduction that looks wrong? Check it
Paste the landlord's itemized statement or deduction letter (or upload a photo) for a read on whether it's a legitimate accounting or an improper money-grab.
🔒 Nothing you submit is stored.
How to get your deposit back in New Jersey
Give the landlord your forwarding address in writing — in many states the 30-day clock doesn't start until you do.
Send a written demand citing N.J. Stat. § 46:8-21.1 and the 30-day deadline.
If they miss the deadline or withhold in bad faith, sue in small-claims — New Jersey allows double the amount due + court costs and attorney's fees.
Bring dated move-in and move-out photos; they beat fabricated "damage" deductions.
True for every renter
Send your forwarding address to the landlord IN WRITING — in many states the return clock doesn't even start until the landlord has your written forwarding address — no address, no deadline, no penalty.
Take dated photos (and video) at move-in AND move-out — deposit disputes are won on evidence; timestamped photos defeat fabricated 'damage' deductions, the most common deposit scam.
Normal wear and tear cannot be deducted — faded paint, minor scuffs, worn carpet from ordinary use are the landlord's cost — only actual damage beyond normal use is deductible.
Most states require an itemized statement of deductions — a landlord who just keeps the money without an itemized list (within the deadline) usually forfeits the right to deduct at all.
Missing the deadline often forfeits ALL deductions — in many states a late landlord must return the entire deposit — even for legitimate damage — so the deadline is your leverage.
Small-claims court is the remedy — and often pays multiples — deposit disputes fit small claims (no lawyer needed), and wrongful withholding can win 2x-3x the deposit plus fees in many states.
Watch for the classic deposit scams — never returning it and ignoring you, inventing 'cleaning/damage' fees, or charging for pre-existing issues — all beatable with photos, a written demand, and the statute.
FAQ
How long does a landlord have to return a security deposit in New Jersey?
In New Jersey the landlord must return your deposit, or send an itemized statement of deductions, within 30 days of move-out. Deposit capped at 1.5 months' rent; doubling is mandatory, not discretionary.
What if my landlord won't return my deposit in New Jersey?
Send a written demand with your forwarding address, then sue in small-claims court. New Jersey allows: Double the amount due + court costs and attorney's fees. Keep dated move-in and move-out photos as evidence.
Can a landlord keep my deposit for normal wear and tear in New Jersey?
No. Normal wear and tear — faded paint, minor scuffs, carpet worn from ordinary use — cannot be deducted anywhere. Only actual damage beyond ordinary use, and most states require an itemized list within the deadline.