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Bill > S3530


NJ S3530

NJ S3530
"Immigrant Tenant Protection Act"; provides certain protections to residential tenants and codifies certain warranty of habitability protections.


summary

Introduced
02/19/2026
In Committee
02/19/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

2026-2027 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill would add legal protections for tenants against landlords who might otherwise try to use immigration status as a way of intimidating tenants who have exercised, or who are about to exercise, their housing rights. The bill would prohibit a landlord from evicting a tenant as a reprisal for or on the basis of the tenant's immigration or citizenship status. Under the bill, the term "immigration or citizenship status" would include a perception that a person has a particular immigration status or citizenship status, or that a person is associated with a person who has, or is perceived to have, a particular immigration status or citizenship status. The bill would prohibit a landlord from threatening to disclose, or actually disclosing, information relating to the immigration or citizenship status of a tenant, occupant, or other person known to the landlord to be associated with a tenant or occupant, for the purpose of influencing the person to vacate a dwelling unit. Additionally, the bill would prohibit a landlord from bringing an action to recover possession of a dwelling unit based solely or partially on the immigration or citizenship status of a tenant. The bill would also prohibit a landlord from bringing an action to recover possession, or otherwise causing a tenant or occupant to quit involuntarily, because of the immigration or citizenship status of a tenant, occupant, or other person known to the landlord to be associated with a tenant or occupant. This prohibition would not apply if a landlord's action is in compliance with a legal obligation under a federal government program that provides for rent limitations or rental assistance to a qualified tenant. The bill would enable a tenant to bring an action seeking damages, penalties, court costs and attorney's fees, and other equitable relief against a landlord that engages in prohibited conduct. The bill also provides that the immigration or citizenship status of a person is irrelevant to any issue of liability or remedy in a civil action involving a tenant's housing rights. The bill would prohibit inquiry into a tenant's immigration or citizenship status in a civil action involving a tenant's housing rights, unless the tenant places a person's immigration or citizenship status directly in contention, or the person seeking to make the inquiry demonstrates by clear and convincing evidence that the inquiry is necessary in order to comply with federal law. Under the bill, a tenant's assertion of an affirmative defense to an eviction action would not constitute cause for discovery or other inquiry into a person's immigration or citizenship status. The bill would establish an affirmative defense for a tenant to raise against an eviction action if the eviction action is commenced after the start of the lease term, and after the tenant has moved in, and if the action is based, in whole or in part, either on the citizenship or immigration status of the tenant, or on the tenant's failure to provide a social security number, credit information, or a form of identification acceptable to the landlord. The bill would establish an affirmative defense for a tenant against an unlawful detainer action if a tenant can prove that a landlord has violated provisions of this bill. The bill would establish a rebuttable presumption that a tenant or occupant has an affirmative defense against an unlawful detainer action if the landlord:· approved the tenant or occupant to take possession of a unit before filing an unlawful detainer action; and· included in the unlawful detainer action a claim based on one of the following:o the failure of a previously approved tenant or occupant to provide a valid social security number;o the failure of a previously approved tenant or occupant to provide information required to obtain a consumer credit report; oro the failure of a previously approved tenant or occupant to provide a form of identification deemed acceptable by the landlord. The bill specifically provides that its provisions do not prohibit a landlord from:· complying with a subpoena, warrant, court order, or legal obligation including, but not limited to, a legal obligation under a government program that provides for rent limitations or rental assistance to a qualified tenant;· requesting information or documentation necessary to determine or verify the financial qualifications of a prospective tenant, or to determine or verify the identity of a prospective tenant or prospective occupant;· notifying a tenant that the tenant's conduct violates the terms of a lease, rental agreement, rule, or regulation. The bill does not enlarge or diminish a landlord's right to terminate a tenancy nor enlarge or diminish the ability of a municipality to regulate or enforce a prohibition against a landlord's harassment of a tenant. The bill requires the Commissioner of Community Affairs (commissioner) to prepare and make available at no cost to the public, a summary of the rights and responsibilities of landlords and tenants established by the bill. The summary is to be accessible to the public on the Internet website of the Department of Community Affairs in the seven most common non-English languages spoken by individuals with limited-English proficiency in the State. The bill directs the commissioner to periodically update the summary as necessary to retain accuracy. This bill also codifies the court-created doctrine of the implied warranty of habitability, and expressly provides that the doctrine applies regardless of immigration or citizenship status. New Jersey courts have recognized that residential leases carry an "implied warranty of habitability," and that tenants have a right to safe, sanitary, and decent housing. This means that a landlord has a duty to maintain the rental unit and keep it fit for residential purposes throughout the entire term of the lease, and it is the intent of this bill to ensure that a lack of repairs by a landlord may not be weaponized by the landlord as tool to constructively evict a tenant. The bill is to take effect immediately.

AI Summary

This bill, titled the "Immigrant Tenant Protection Act," establishes new protections for residential tenants by prohibiting landlords from using a tenant's immigration or citizenship status, or the perception of it, to intimidate or evict them. Specifically, landlords are forbidden from threatening to disclose or actually disclosing a tenant's immigration status to influence them to leave, or from initiating eviction proceedings based on that status, unless it's to comply with a federal rent assistance program. Tenants can sue landlords for violations, seeking damages, penalties, and legal costs. The bill also clarifies that immigration status is generally irrelevant in civil housing disputes and prohibits inquiries into it unless directly contested by the tenant or required by federal law. Furthermore, it creates an affirmative defense for tenants against eviction if the action is based on their immigration status or their inability to provide a social security number, credit information, or identification after moving in, and establishes a presumption of this defense if a landlord approves a tenant and then tries to evict them for these reasons. The bill also codifies the "implied warranty of habitability," meaning landlords must maintain rental properties as fit for human habitation, regardless of a tenant's immigration status, and this duty cannot be used by landlords to constructively evict tenants. Finally, the Commissioner of Community Affairs will provide public summaries of these rights and responsibilities in multiple languages.

Committee Categories

Housing and Urban Affairs

Sponsors (2)

Last Action

Introduced in the Senate, Referred to Senate Community and Urban Affairs Committee (on 02/19/2026)

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