TRENTON, N.J. — A $7.3 billion annual cost tied to illegal immigration is taking center stage in New Jersey’s policy debate, as Republican lawmakers warn expanding benefits and limiting enforcement could increase financial pressure on taxpayers.
Assemblyman Paul Kanitra (R-Ocean), a leading Republican voice on the issue, said state policies are driving both migration and spending, citing a GOP-backed report estimating billions in annual costs across public services.
Kanitra, who authored the report, argues New Jersey’s approach is creating unintended incentives.
“Our actions here in New Jersey are incentivizing… people worldwide to break our laws,” he said.
Cost estimates shape policy debate
At the core of the debate is a 2024 New Jersey Assembly Republican report estimating that undocumented immigration costs state and local governments approximately $7.3 billion per year.
The estimate includes spending across five major areas: education, healthcare, housing, legal services, and public safety—categories that lawmakers say are under increasing strain.
Kanitra described the fiscal scope in stark terms, warning that the burden extends broadly across taxpayers.
“Costing New Jersey taxpayers a staggering $7.3 billion per year,” he said.
Republican messaging has consistently framed the issue as a growing budgetary challenge, particularly as the state advances new immigration-related legislation that expands access to services and limits cooperation with federal enforcement.
Where the money is spent: 5 major cost drivers
According to Republican-backed analysis and policy briefs, the estimated costs are concentrated in several key sectors:
- Education — The largest expense category, driven by ESL programs, bilingual staffing, and increased classroom capacity requirements. Federal law mandates access to public education regardless of immigration status.
- Healthcare — Emergency room care and uncompensated services contribute significantly, with hospitals often absorbing costs that are later shifted to taxpayers.
- Housing and social services — Rental assistance, shelters, and public housing programs create additional demand in an already constrained housing market.
- Legal and court systems — State-funded legal aid and deportation defense programs, along with court processing costs, add to overall spending.
- Public safety — Law enforcement, incarceration, and emergency services represent another significant portion of expenditures, though this category remains heavily debated.
Kanitra also pointed to per-person cost estimates included in the report.
“Nearly 1 in 10 residents… receives roughly $8,000 a year in… benefits,” he said.
Key Points
• GOP report estimates illegal immigration costs New Jersey $7.3 billion annually
• Assemblyman Paul Kanitra says state policies are “incentivizing” migration
• Costs are concentrated in education, healthcare, housing, legal services, and public safety
Republicans frame policies as incentive-driven
Beyond raw cost figures, Republican lawmakers argue that state-level policies are contributing to increased migration by expanding access to public benefits.
Kanitra and other GOP officials have repeatedly described New Jersey as a “magnet” for illegal immigration, pointing to policies that limit cooperation with federal authorities and expand eligibility for services.
They argue that these policies, taken together, encourage individuals to relocate to the state in order to access taxpayer-funded programs.
“[They are] incentivizing and encouraging people… to access taxpayer-funded benefits,” Republican messaging states.
This framing has become central to GOP opposition to recent legislative efforts, including bills that restrict data sharing with federal immigration authorities, expand tenant protections, and limit enforcement activity in certain locations.
Democrats and advocates dispute fiscal framing
Supporters of current policies, including immigrant advocacy groups, argue that the cost estimates cited by Republicans present an incomplete picture of the overall economic impact.
A 2024 analysis found that undocumented immigrants in New Jersey contribute approximately $1.3 billion annually in state and local taxes through sales taxes, property taxes, and payroll deductions.
Advocates say these contributions, along with labor participation in key industries, offset a portion of the costs outlined in GOP reports.
They also emphasize that many expenses—particularly in education—are tied to U.S.-born children and federally mandated services, making them unavoidable regardless of state policy.
In sectors like healthcare and housing, supporters argue that broader systemic issues, including rising costs and limited supply, play a larger role than immigration alone.
Ongoing clash as legislation advances
The fiscal debate is unfolding alongside a broader legislative push in New Jersey to formalize immigration protections into law.
Recent measures signed by Gov. Mikie Sherrill include restrictions on cooperation with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), limits on data sharing, and new requirements for law enforcement transparency during operations.
Additional bills under consideration would expand civil liability for federal agents, strengthen tenant protections, and restrict immigration enforcement in certain public spaces.
Republicans argue these policies could increase the very costs highlighted in their report, while Democrats maintain they are necessary to protect civil rights and ensure access to essential services.
Related coverage has tracked how these competing priorities—fiscal concerns versus civil protections—are shaping immigration policy debates across multiple states.
What comes next
With immigration legislation continuing to move through the Statehouse, the debate over costs, enforcement, and economic impact is expected to remain a defining issue in New Jersey’s 2026 session.
Lawmakers on both sides have signaled little room for compromise, as the discussion increasingly centers on whether the state’s policies represent a financial strain or a necessary framework for managing a diverse and economically active population.
The legislative process is ongoing, with no final resolution reached on several key proposals and the broader policy direction still under active debate.