Statute of Limitations on Debt in New Jersey
Every consumer debt in New Jersey has a statute of limitations (SOL) -- a cutoff after which a creditor generally cannot sue to collect. The SOL depends on the type of debt and the terms of the underlying contract.
This page summarizes the New Jersey SOL matrix, revival rules (what restarts the clock), and bankruptcy's effect on SOL tolling.
New Jersey SOL Matrix
| Debt Type | New Jersey SOL (years) |
|---|---|
| Written contract | 6 |
| Oral contract | 6 |
| Promissory note | 6 |
| Open account (credit card) | 6 |
| Medical debt | 6 |
| Judgment lifespan | 20 |
Source note: N.J.S.A. 2A:14-1. Partial payment may restart SOL.
Every New Jersey collections defense begins by identifying the SOL for the specific debt type and then tracing the accrual date -- usually the date of last payment or the date of default on a written contract.
Written Contract SOL: 6 Years
Most credit agreements, loan documents, and written contracts fall under the 6-year written-contract SOL. This covers:
- Personal loans with signed promissory notes.
- Auto loans and retail installment contracts.
- Mortgage deficiency claims (in many states).
- Student loans (if private; federal student loans have no SOL).
The 6-year clock starts running from the date of default or last payment, whichever is later under New Jersey law. See the full state guide.
Credit Card Debt SOL in New Jersey: 6 Years
Credit card debt is usually treated as an open account or "account stated" under New Jersey law, with a 6-year SOL. However, some creditors argue the applicable period is the longer written-contract SOL because a cardmember agreement was signed.
The choice-of-law clause in the cardmember agreement frequently designates Delaware, South Dakota, or Utah. New Jersey courts apply the "borrowing statute" -- if the foreign SOL is shorter, it may apply.
Medical Debt SOL in New Jersey: 6 Years
New Jersey medical debt is usually governed by the open-account or written-contract SOL (depending on whether the patient signed a financial responsibility form). Typical effective SOL: 6 years.
Medical debt also benefits from federal and state protections that predate litigation: 501(r) financial-assistance policies, the CFPB 2025 Medical Debt Rule on credit reporting, and the No Surprises Act. See medical debt SOL and New Jersey medical debt rights.
Judgment Lifespan in New Jersey: 20 Years
Once a creditor obtains a judgment, a new clock starts: the judgment's lifespan or dormancy period. In New Jersey, a judgment lasts approximately 20 years before it must be renewed.
Renewal procedures vary: some states require a new action; others allow a motion to revive. A renewed judgment can restart the clock for additional years. For a New Jersey debtor facing an old but renewed judgment, bankruptcy may discharge the underlying liability even if the judgment is still "live."
Revival and Tolling in New Jersey
The SOL clock does not always run steadily from default to expiration. New Jersey law recognizes several revival (restart) and tolling (pause) events:
- Partial payment - in most states, any payment restarts the clock. A few states require written acknowledgment in addition.
- Written acknowledgment - a signed letter acknowledging the debt typically restarts the clock.
- Promise to pay - oral promises vary in effect; written promises are usually effective.
- Out-of-state residence - while the debtor is out of state, SOL may toll.
- Active-duty military service - SCRA Section 3936 tolls SOL during active service.
- Bankruptcy stay - tolled during the pendency of the automatic stay.
Bankruptcy Stay Effect on New Jersey SOL
Under 11 U.S.C. Section 108(c), non-bankruptcy SOL is extended for the duration of the automatic stay plus 30 days, for any claim against the debtor. This means that filing bankruptcy does not end the underlying SOL; it pauses it.
For a New Jersey debtor, the practical implication:
- Filing bankruptcy stops collection immediately.
- If the case is dismissed before discharge, the creditor has the remaining SOL plus 30 days to sue.
- If the debt is discharged, the underlying SOL is moot -- the debt is no longer legally enforceable regardless of SOL.
SOL as a Defense in New Jersey Collection Suits
SOL is an affirmative defense in New Jersey. That means the debtor must plead it in the answer to a collection suit; if not pleaded, it is typically waived.
A New Jersey debtor served with a collection suit should:
- Identify the date of default or last payment.
- Identify the SOL for the debt type (see table above).
- If SOL has run, file a written answer asserting SOL as an affirmative defense.
- File a motion to dismiss or motion for summary judgment on SOL grounds.
SOL, FDCPA, and Junk-Debt Buyers in New Jersey
Under the federal FDCPA and CFPB guidance, a debt collector cannot:
- File suit on a time-barred debt.
- Threaten to sue on a time-barred debt.
- Misrepresent the SOL status in dunning letters.
In New Jersey, dunning letters on time-barred debt must include clear disclosures that the debt cannot be sued on. Violations can be FDCPA statutory damages of up to $1,000 plus attorney fees, and in many states similar claims under state UDAP.
New Jersey Federal Bankruptcy Data
When SOL defenses are unavailable or exhausted, bankruptcy is the remaining tool. New Jersey consumer bankruptcy volume shows the downstream impact.
Numbers below come from the Federal Judicial Center Integrated Database covering 1,580 consumer bankruptcy cases from New Jersey's federal bankruptcy courts.
| Chapter | Cases Filed | Discharge Rate | Dismissal Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chapter 7 | 526 | 97.3% | 2.7% |
| Chapter 13 | 1,054 | 31.0% | 68.8% |
Rates computed on resolved cases only. Source: FJC Integrated Database.