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A5263
ASSEMBLY, No. 5263
STATE OF NEW JERSEY
222nd LEGISLATURE
�
INTRODUCED JUNE 15, 2026
Sponsored by:
Assemblywoman� SHANIQUE SPEIGHT
District 29 (Essex and Hudson)
SYNOPSIS
���� Permits tenant to make rent payment into escrow
account in event of persisting serious hazard in dwelling unit or to make
repairs and deduct cost from future rent.
CURRENT VERSION OF TEXT
���� As introduced.
��
An Act
concerning rent payments and repairs in
residential rental units and supplementing chapter 42 of Title 2A of the
Revised Statutes.
����
Be It
Enacted
by the Senate and General Assembly of
the State of New Jersey:
���� 1.��� a.�������� For the
purpose of this section:
���� �Serious hazard affecting
habitability� or� �serious hazard� means a deficiency in a vital facility,
including, but not limited to, mold, unsafe staircases, missing or
nonfunctional locks, broken toilets, lack of hot or cold water, lack of
electricity, or broken heating system.
���� b.� A residential tenant may
remit rent payments into a separate escrow account if, after providing
notification to the landlord and reasonable time for repairs to occur, a
serious hazard affecting habitability persists within the tenant�s dwelling
unit or the dwelling unit property.� Upon completion of repairs to address a
serious hazard the tenant shall provide due payments to the landlord from the
escrow account.
���� c.���� Payment of residential
rent into an escrow account following the persistence of a serious hazard shall
not be considered grounds for eviction as a default of rent payment or other
grounds for eviction pursuant to section 2 of P.L.1974, c.49 (C.2A:18-61.1).
���� 2.��� a.�������� If a
residential landlord fails to make repairs of facilities within a dwelling unit
that are necessary to maintain habitability after being given written
notification and a reasonable time to make a repair, including, but not limited
to, repairs involving mold, unsafe staircases, or broken heating system, a
residential tenant may make arrangements for repair and further deduct the cost
of repair in an amount up to four months of rent payments under the terms of
the residential lease.�
���� b.��� Deduction of rent from
the cost of repairs made by a tenant shall not be considered grounds for
eviction as a default of rent payment or other grounds for eviction pursuant to
section 2 of P.L.1974, c.49 (C.2A:18-61.1).
���� 3.��� This act shall take
effect on the first day of the first month after enactment.
STATEMENT
���� This bill permits a tenant to
pay rent into an escrow account or make arrangements for the repair and deduct
up to four months rent when a serious hazard affecting habitability, as defined
in the bill, persists within the dwelling unit.� Serious hazards can include
mold, unsafe staircases, broken heating systems, and other deficiencies in
vital facilities.
���� The bill provides that a
tenant may remit rent payments into an escrow account if, after notifying the
landlord and providing reasonable time for the repairs to occur, a serious
hazard affecting habitability persist within the dwelling unit or on the property
of the dwelling unit.� The bill provides that utilization of an escrow account
to withhold rent payments from a landlord in the event of a serious hazard
affecting habitability will not be grounds for eviction.
���� The bill additionally codifies
and expands repair and deduct principles.� Under the bill a tenant is
authorized to deduct up to four months from future rent to make arrangements
for repairs if a landlord does not repair a serious hazard affecting habitability.�
Prior to applying repair and deduct, the bill requires that a tenant provide
written notification to the landlord detailing the serious hazard affecting
habitability and allow for a reasonable time for the landlord to make the
repair.