Bill
Bill > S2673
NJ S2673
NJ S2673Provides mortgage payment relief, income tax relief, consumer reporting protection, and eviction protection for residential property owners, tenants, and other consumers, economically impacted during time of coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic.
summary
Introduced
01/13/2026
01/13/2026
In Committee
01/13/2026
01/13/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
Introduced Session
2026-2027 Regular Session
Bill Summary
This bill would provide protections to certain homeowners, tenants, and landlords during the COVID-19 pandemic emergency period. Under the bill, "emergency period" means the period during which a public health emergency exists as declared by the Governor in Executive Order No. 103 of 2020, as extended, and the 60 days following the conclusion of this period. The bill provides that, during the emergency period, a creditor is required to grant a mortgage forbearance to an impacted homeowner if the impacted homeowner submits a written request to the mortgage servicer affirming the following: (1) the impacted homeowner has suffered a substantial reduction of income resulting from COVID-19 or the Public Health Emergency or State of Emergency declared in response thereto, including a financial hardship from a reduction in hours or loss of employment, or increased costs incurred in necessary child care resulting from the closure of schools or caring for family members who are ill due to COVID-19 or quarantined due to a suspected exposure to COVID-19, or for funeral costs due to COVID-19; (2) the gross household income of the homeowner does not exceed 150 percent of the area median income after hardship, unless this requirement for eligibility is waived by the mortgage lender; and (3) the impacted homeowner's bank accounts collectively contain less than six months' reserves of the impacted homeowner's gross household income for 2019. Upon receipt of a request for a mortgage forbearance from an impacted homeowner, the bill requires a creditor to provide to the impacted homeowner with a mortgage forbearance and confirmation of that forbearance in writing. The minimum initial mortgage forbearance period of an impacted homeowner is to be 90 days. An impacted homeowner may request, and is to be granted, a subsequent forbearance period of at minimum 90 days, for a total of at minimum 180 days. Fees, penalties, or interest, including attorney's fees, shall not be assessed or accrue during and as a result of a mortgage forbearance. Consistent with federal law, the bill provides that a creditor shall not furnish negative mortgage payment information to a debt collector or credit reporting agency related to mortgage payments subject to a mortgage forbearance under the bill. In response to a complaint to the Attorney General from an impacted homeowner, the Attorney General may bring an action alleging a creditor has violated this prohibition. Under the bill, the repayment period of any mortgage subject to the forbearance would be extended by the number of months the forbearance is in effect. The payments not made during the months of the forbearance would instead be due on a monthly basis during the period constituting an extension of the mortgage, unless the property owner chooses to make these payments earlier. An impacted homeowner denied a forbearance under the bill by a creditor licensed by the Department of Banking and Insurance ("DOBI"), and not a State- or nationally-chartered financial institution, may file a complaint with DOBI. The department would be required to investigate the complaint and, if appropriate, would order the creditor to grant a forbearance to the impacted homeowner. The bill also provides that, prior to the end of the emergency period, a landlord or owner of a residential property would not, for the purposes of a residential eviction for nonpayment or habitually late payment of rent, defined as a "non-essential eviction": (1) terminate a tenancy; (2) file a summary dispossess action; or (3) send any notice, including a notice to quit, requesting or demanding that a tenant of a residential property vacate the premises. The bill would further require that, upon the filing of a landlord tenant complaint, the plaintiff landlord would be required to certify that the complaint is not seeking to evict an impacted tenant of the tenant's primary residence due to nonpayment or habitually late payment of rent due during the emergency period, except where the impacted tenant has failed to repay rent due during the emergency period in accordance with a repayment plan entered in compliance with the bill. No later than 60 days following enactment of the bill, the plaintiff landlord in any landlord/tenant action pending before the court would also be required to certify that the landlord-tenant complaint is not brought to evict an impacted tenant of the impacted tenant's primary residence due to nonpayment or habitually late payment of rent due during the emergency period, unless the impacted tenant has failed to repay rent due during the emergency period in accordance with a repayment plan entered in compliance with the bill. However, rent due from a period prior to the emergency period is not to restrict a tenant from accessing the protections provided under the bill to other impacted tenants, so long as the payments has subsequently was made. Consistent with federal law, a landlord is required not to furnish rental payment data to a collection or credit reporting agency related to the non-payment of rent during the emergency period. The bill further prohibits landlords from refusing to rent to a tenant or submit the tenant's information for placement on a list for the use of other landlords because of any record or information reflecting the tenant's non-payment of rent during the emergency. Under the bill, in response to a complaint to the Attorney General from an impacted tenant, the Attorney General may bring an action alleging a landlord has violated prohibition on the furnishing of information to a collection or credit reporting agency. However, if a landlord furnishes rental payment data to a collection or credit reporting agency related to the non-payment of rent during the emergency period, but before the enactment of this bill, then the landlord would not be subject to this penalty provision, except for an order to retract of the report. Additionally, the bill provides that, in order to avoid mass evictions and widespread homelessness following the conclusion of the moratorium on evictions required under the bill, a landlord shall offer each tenant who has missed any partial or full rent payments prior to the end of the emergency period the ability to enter into an agreement, which would be an addendum to the lease agreement, for the repayment of any partial or full rent payments not made during the emergency period, provided the tenant's rent payments were current including payments held in escrow as of the effective date of Executive Order No. 106 of 2020. The bill also establishes an income tax credit for certain landlords who permanently forgive a portion of rent unpaid during the emergency period. The bill prohibits a tenant from accepting an offer from a landlord if the tenant's gross household income exceeds 100 percent of the area median income after hardship unless the landlord makes an exception; or the tenant possesses one or more bank accounts that collectively contain reserves equaling six months' or more of the tenant's gross household income for 2019. To prevent a landlord from losing their primary home in a foreclosure due to COVID-19 economic hardship, the bill would exempt owners of owner-occupied properties with four or less units from having to enter into a rent repayment plan with their impacted tenant if after the owner has completed an application for a mortgage forbearance, but is denied the forbearance. Creditors covered in this bill would be prohibited from denying a landlord of an owner-occupied property a mortgage forbearance if their tenants cannot pay rent. During the repayment period, a landlord would be prohibited from imposing any late fees or any other fees, including attorney's fees, for rent payments not made during the emergency period. Additionally, the bill requires the Department of Community Affairs to prepare and make available on its Internet website a statement of the rights and responsibilities of impacted tenants and landlords for the repayment of missed rent payments and an explanation of, and model template for, the default repayment plans available pursuant to the bill. This statement and templates shall be printed in the English, Spanish, Arabic, French, Russian, Korean, Chinese, and Vietnamese languages. Under the bill, not later than 30 days after the statement is made available by the department, every landlord is required to distribute one copy of the statement and templates prepared and made available to each of their impacted tenants within 10 business days after it has been made available by the department, and landlords may not demand payment of unpaid rent until after the statement and templates have been distributed to each impacted tenant. If a landlord fails to comply with this distribution requirement, this failure may be used by the impacted tenant as an affirmative defense to an action seeking the recovery of rent, or to a landlord-tenant complaint seeking a judgment for possession against the impacted tenant, if brought by the landlord to recover rent due during the emergency period. The bill provides that, within 10 business days following the conclusion of the emergency period, a landlord is required to calculate all partial or full rent payments legally owed and not made during the emergency period by each impacted tenant liable for rent repayment pursuant to the bill. After determining the amount of the missed payments and applying all credits, if any, due to the impacted tenant, the landlord is required to provide each impacted tenant with a written notice, using the template to be prepared and made available on its website by the department, of the amount owed by the impacted tenant in a form that specifies, in detail, the amount claimed to be due and an itemization of all credits to which the impacted tenant is entitled. All amounts shall be legal and in compliance with all applicable laws, including local rent control ordinances. If the impacted tenant does not agree with the amount claimed due, the notice shall provide that the impacted tenant shall notify the landlord within 25 days after the date on which the rent and arrearage repayments are to commence; provided, however, that the impacted tenant shall still begin repayment of missed rent pursuant to the repayment agreement. If the landlord fails to demonstrate the correctness of the amount assessed of rent due and owing by the impacted tenant, then the landlord shall refund any incorrectly assessed amount paid by the tenant plus a penalty of 20 percent of such amount within 30 days. The bill would require an impacted tenant and landlord to enter into a written agreement for any unpaid rent during the emergency period. If the landlord and impacted tenant are unable to reach an agreement, or if the agreement is deemed to be unaffordable by the tenant, the bill would require any unpaid rent during the emergency period to be paid through a default repayment plan. The default repayment plan would provide an impacted tenant with six months to repay each month's-worth of rent that was unpaid during the emergency period. However, if this schedule would take over 30 months to repay, then the default repayment plan would require repayments for only 30 months, with each monthly repayment consisting of one-thirtieth of the total amount of rent left unpaid during the emergency period. that if any rent that went unpaid during the emergency period continues to be unpaid despite an impacted tenant's compliance with this repayment schedule, then that remaining unpaid rent would be due in full on the last day of the 30th month of the repayment period. A surrender of property by an impacted tenant would not relieve the impacted tenant from the obligation to pay any rent missed during the emergency period or restrict a landlord's ability to recover such rent. The bill provides that it would be unlawful discrimination in violation of the "New Jersey Law Against Discrimination," P.L.1945, c.169 (C.10:5-1 et seq.) for a creditor or landlord to discriminate in application of the bill because of an impacted homeowners' or tenant's race, creed, color, national origin, ancestry, marital status, civil union status, domestic partnership status, pregnancy or breastfeeding, sex, gender identity or expression, affectional or sexual orientation, familial status, disability, liability for service in the Armed Forces of the United States, nationality, or source of lawful income used for rental or mortgage payments. The bill would additionally require that, upon written request from a tenant, including electronic communication, money or other forms of security deposited would be applied to or credited towards rent payments due or to become due from the tenant during the emergency period. When a tenant applies money or other forms of security deposited or advanced to pay rent, the following additional provisions would also apply for the duration of the tenant's current contract, lease, or license agreement: (1) The landlord would be able to recoup from the tenant any monies the landlord expended that would have been reimbursable by the money or other forms of security deposited or advanced by the tenant, or interest or earnings thereon, at the time that reimbursement from such money, security, interest, or earnings would have taken place; and (2) The tenant would otherwise be without obligation to deposit or advance further money or forms of security relating to the contract, lease, or license agreement. However, if the tenant and landlord extend or renew their contract, lease, or license agreement following the effective date of the bill, then the tenant would be obligated to replenish the money or forms of security required under the contract, lease, or license agreement in full on or before the end of the emergency period, or on the date on which the current contract, lease, or license agreement is extended or renewed, whichever is later. The bill also would establish within the "New Jersey Housing and Mortgage Finance Agency" (HMFA) a "COVID-19 Impact Fund." Proceeds of the fund may be used: (a) to maintain mortgage payments and related fees and escrows owed to HMFA for properties which are approved for mortgage forbearance or otherwise materially impacted by the impact of COVID-19; and (b) in cases where the value of the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit has been reduced due to the impact of the public health crisis caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, to close the financing gap caused by the pricing drop and ensure that the production of affordable housing can continue. The Executive Director of HMFA would be permitted to petition the Commissioner of Community Affairs to transfer funds from the New Jersey Affordable Housing Trust Fund to the COVID-19 Impact Fund. This bill would take effect immediately and would apply retroactively to rent and mortgage payments missed subsequent to March 9, 2020.
AI Summary
This bill provides protections for homeowners and tenants impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic during an "emergency period," defined as the duration of the Governor's declared public health emergency and 60 days after. For homeowners facing financial hardship due to COVID-19, creditors must grant a "mortgage forbearance," which is a suspension of principal and interest payments, for at least 90 days, with the possibility of extensions up to 180 days, and prohibits fees or negative credit reporting during this period; the missed payments will be added to the end of the loan term. Tenants facing similar hardships are protected from "non-essential evictions," meaning landlords cannot terminate tenancies, file eviction lawsuits, or issue notices to vacate for non-payment or habitually late rent during the emergency period, and landlords are prohibited from reporting missed rent payments to credit agencies. The bill also establishes a framework for tenants to enter into repayment plans with landlords for rent owed during the emergency period, with a default plan offering six months to repay each month of missed rent, and creates a "COVID-19 Impact Fund" to support affordable housing initiatives and a tax credit for landlords who forgive rent.
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)
Official Document
bill text
bill summary
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bill summary
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bill summary
| Document Type | Source Location |
|---|---|
| State Bill Page | https://www.njleg.state.nj.us/bill-search/2026/S2673 |
| BillText | https://pub.njleg.gov/Bills/2026/S3000/2673_I1.HTM |
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