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New Jersey moves to provide additional housing rights to immigrants

  • Shore News Network
  • March 5, 2026
  • 4:16 pm
New Jersey moves to provide additional housing rights to immigrants

Proposed legislation would ban landlords from using immigration status to intimidate or evict residential tenants.

Trenton, NJ – New Jersey lawmakers have introduced legislation aimed at strengthening tenant protections by prohibiting landlords from using a renter’s immigration or citizenship status as leverage in eviction disputes or housing conflicts.

The measure, Senate Bill S3530, sponsored by Sen. M. Teresa Ruiz of Essex and Hudson counties and Senate President Nicholas Scutari of Somerset and Union counties, is titled the “Immigrant Tenant Protection Act.” The proposal would establish new legal safeguards for tenants and formally codify housing habitability protections under state law.


Key Points

• New Jersey bill would prohibit landlords from threatening tenants over immigration status
• Tenants could sue landlords for damages and penalties of up to $2,000 per violation
• Legislation would also codify the state’s implied warranty of habitability protections


The legislation would make it unlawful for a landlord to threaten to disclose—or actually disclose—a tenant’s immigration status in an effort to force them to leave a rental unit. Landlords would also be prohibited from filing eviction actions based fully or partially on a tenant’s immigration or citizenship status.

Under the bill, tenants who believe a landlord violated those provisions could file a civil lawsuit seeking damages, court costs, attorney’s fees, and civil penalties of up to $2,000 for each violation.

Immigration status barred from most housing disputes

The proposal would also restrict the use of immigration status as a legal tactic in housing-related court cases.

In most civil proceedings involving tenant housing rights, immigration or citizenship status would be considered irrelevant and could not be raised during discovery or court proceedings. Exceptions would only apply if the tenant directly makes immigration status part of the case or if federal law requires the inquiry.

The bill further states that raising a legal defense to an eviction would not open the door for landlords to question a tenant’s immigration status.

Additional eviction defenses for tenants

The measure would create new legal defenses for tenants facing eviction if a landlord’s action is based in whole or in part on immigration status.

Tenants could also raise a defense if eviction is pursued after they have already moved into the unit and the landlord claims the tenant failed to provide a Social Security number, credit-report information, or identification acceptable to the landlord.

In those cases, courts would presume the tenant has a valid defense if the landlord approved the renter before attempting to remove them.

Bill also codifies habitability protections

Beyond immigration protections, the legislation would formally establish in statute the implied warranty of habitability, a long-standing legal doctrine recognized by New Jersey courts.

The provision would require landlords to ensure rental properties remain safe and suitable for living conditions, including common areas shared by tenants. The bill specifies that those protections apply to all residents regardless of immigration status.

State to publish tenant rights summary

If enacted, the Department of Community Affairs would be required to publish a public summary explaining the rights and responsibilities created by the law.

The information would be made available online and translated into the seven most common non-English languages spoken by residents with limited English proficiency in New Jersey.

The bill took effect upon introduction on February 19 and is now under consideration in the 222nd New Jersey Legislature.


Tags: new jersey housing, tenant rights, new jersey legislature

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