Debt Collection Laws in New Jersey
If you're dealing with debt collection in New Jersey, here's what actually protects you: a cap on how much of your paycheck can be garnished, a base amount of home equity and bank funds creditors can't touch, and a deadline after which a debt lawsuit generally can't succeed. Current as ofJuly 2026 — sourcing for each section is linked below.
How much of my paycheck can be garnished in New Jersey?
New Jersey caps most wage garnishment at 10% of gross income if you earn below 250% of the federal poverty level for your household size — roughly $37,650/year for a single person. Above that threshold, a court can allow up to 25%, matching the federal cap, under N.J. Stat. § 2A:17-56.
That poverty-linked floor makes New Jersey meaningfully more protective than a flat federal-cap state for lower earners, since the 10% ceiling applies regardless of the federal 25% rule as long as you're under the income threshold.
Tier: Meaningfully stricter than the federal formula — see the full 20-state ranking.
Can a creditor take money from my bank account in New Jersey?
New Jersey's general personal-property exemption is just $1,000, excluding wearing apparel — one of the smallest in the country, under N.J. Stat. § 2A:17-19. It isn't a bank-account-specific exemption, so funds beyond that cushion are generally vulnerable to a levy.
This is a genuinely thin protection compared to most other states, and it hasn't been adjusted for inflation. If you're facing a bank levy in New Jersey, moving quickly to claim any applicable exemption (or address the underlying judgment) matters more than in states with a larger cushion.
Is my home protected from creditors in New Jersey?
New Jersey has no state homestead exemption protecting home equity from judgment creditors outside of bankruptcy. If you file for bankruptcy, New Jersey requires debtors to use the federal exemption scheme instead of a state one, which does include a federal homestead exemption.
Married couples get some indirect protection through tenancy by the entirety — a creditor with a judgment against only one spouse generally can't force a sale of jointly owned property to satisfy that spouse's individual debt — but that's a separate legal doctrine, not a homestead exemption.
How long can a debt collector sue me in New Jersey?
In New Jersey, a creditor has 6 years to sue you over contract-based debt like a credit card or personal loan, whether written or oral, under N.J. Stat. § 2A:14-1. A separate 4-year period applies to contracts for the sale of goods under the UCC.
| Debt type | Statute of limitations |
|---|---|
| Credit card / written or oral contract | 6 years |
| Sale-of-goods contract (UCC) | 4 years |
The clock runs from your date of default, not from when a collector discovers or starts pursuing the debt. Note that an expired statute of limitations bars a new lawsuit, but it doesn't erase the debt itself or stop collection calls and letters — a common point of confusion.
See how New Jersey's 6 years deadline compares to all 20 states.
Does New Jersey have its own debt collection law beyond the federal FDCPA?
New Jersey doesn't have a standalone mini-FDCPA. Deceptive collection conduct is generally challenged under the general Consumer Fraud Act (N.J. Stat. § 56:8-1 et seq.), and debt buyers and collectors operating in the state typically need a license from the Department of Banking and Insurance.
Whether the Consumer Fraud Act reaches original creditors — as opposed to third-party collectors and debt buyers — is genuinely unsettled in New Jersey case law, with courts having gone different ways depending on the facts. Don't assume it automatically covers your original lender the way some other states' mini-FDCPAs do.
Where can I find free or low-cost legal help in New Jersey?
If you're dealing with a debt lawsuit, garnishment, or collector dispute in New Jersey, a good starting point is the state bar's lawyer referral service or one of the legal aid organizations below — both can point you to self-help court resources even if you don't qualify for free representation.