New Jersey
HOA Laws
New Jersey has comprehensive legislation for both planned developments and condominiums. The state requires registration of new developments with the Department of Community Affairs and provides detailed consumer protections.
Tracking aid, not legal advice.
SpotHOA monitors New Jersey HOA-related statutes weekly. We surface drafts of detected changes here after review. Always confirm with your attorney before relying on any of this for board action. State law changes; this page may lag the actual statute by days.
Governing statutes
Key provisions
- New developments must register with the Department of Community Affairs
- Public offering statements with detailed disclosures are required
- Boards must hold annual meetings and provide financial statements
- Assessment collection procedures include specific consumer protections
- Owners have rights to access association records and attend meetings
Regulatory body
Registers planned developments and condominiums and provides consumer protection oversight.
Tracking aid, not legal advice.
SpotHOA monitors New Jersey HOA-related statutes weekly. We surface drafts of detected changes here after review. Always confirm with your attorney before relying on any of this for board action. State law changes; this page may lag the actual statute by days.