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Bill > S708


NJ S708

NJ S708
Concerns assessment of farmland for property tax purposes.


summary

Introduced
01/13/2026
In Committee
01/13/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

2026-2027 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill would revise the "Farmland Assessment Act of 1964" (act) to clarify that the mere cessation of agricultural or horticultural activity on land that is valued, assessed, and taxed as farmland under that law, will not subject the land to roll-back taxes unless an active conversion of the land to a non-agricultural or non-horticultural use takes place. "Roll-back taxes" are the additional taxes assessed on a property that is no longer dedicated to agricultural or horticultural use. The amount of roll-back taxes assessed on a property are the difference between the property taxes paid on the property as assessed for agricultural or horticultural use and the taxes that would have otherwise been due if the property had been taxed as other land within the taxing district. These taxes are assessed for the tax year in which agricultural or horticultural use was discontinued and the two tax years preceding. The bill permits an owner of land that is subject to valuation, assessment, and taxation pursuant to the act to petition the assessor of the taxing district in which the land is located to request a hardship exemption from the provisions of the act relating to roll-back taxes, for land that is not actively devoted to agricultural or horticultural use, or that is applied to a use other than agricultural or horticultural use, which would otherwise be subject to roll-back taxes. The bill requires the assessor to prepare guidance containing the assessor's requirements for the contents of an owner's hardship petition. For all land within the taxing district that is subject to valuation, assessment, and taxation pursuant to the act as of the effective date of the bill, the bill requires the assessor to distribute the guidance to an owner of land at least 90 days prior to the date that an application under the act is due. Thereafter, the bill requires the assessor to distribute the guidance to an owner of land no later than 30 days after the assessor's decision to approve an application under the act. In considering whether to grant a hardship petition, the bill requires the tax assessor to consider certain factors described in the bill, of which no one factor is to be dispositive. The bill provides a deadline for the hardship petition to be submitted, and specifies that the assessor may grant or deny the hardship petition, condition the assessor's decision on the continued production of certain proofs or documents, and determine the length of the hardship exemption, if granted.

AI Summary

This bill clarifies that simply stopping agricultural or horticultural activity on land already assessed as farmland won't trigger "roll-back taxes" – which are additional taxes meant to recoup the difference between farmland property taxes and what would have been paid if the land were taxed normally – unless the land is actively converted to a non-farm use. The bill also introduces a hardship exemption process, allowing landowners to petition their local tax assessor for relief from roll-back taxes if they face difficult circumstances that prevent them from actively farming their land, even if it's not currently in agricultural or horticultural use. The assessor must provide guidance on how to file these hardship petitions and consider several factors, such as the nature of the hardship and the owner's intent to return the land to farming, when making a decision, though no single factor will be decisive.

Committee Categories

Housing and Urban Affairs

Sponsors (1)

Last Action

Introduced in the Senate, Referred to Senate Community and Urban Affairs Committee (on 01/13/2026)

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