New Jersey: No Wholesaling-Specific Law
State: New Jersey | Status: No wholesaling-specific statute as of July 7, 2026 | Bottom line: The standard wholesale model, contract then assign then fee at closing, is legal here. The thing that gets people fined is acting like an agent without a license.
What This Means
New Jersey has not passed anything that targets wholesaling. There is no required disclosure form, no registration list, no cancellation right for sellers, no anti-assignment rule. A real estate purchase contract in New Jersey is a contract like any other, and contract law lets you assign it unless the document itself forbids it.
That means nothing about your normal process changes: get the property under contract with clear assignment language, market the deal to your buyers list, assign, close, get paid.
The boundary you must respect is the same one every state enforces. Doing broker work, connecting buyers and sellers for compensation on property you have no stake in, requires a real estate license. To stay on the right side:
- Sell what you own. Your ads should offer an assignable purchase contract, not the house. Photos, address, "for sale by me" language on a property you do not own reads like unlicensed brokerage to a regulator.
- Be a principal in every transaction. The moment you are brokering someone else's deal for a fee, you need a license.
- If open property marketing is core to your model, getting licensed is the clean fix.
Watch Out For
- Unlicensed brokerage exposure is the entire risk map in New Jersey right now. This is a dense, high-dollar, heavily lawyered market, so sloppy marketing gets noticed faster here than in most places.
- No New Jersey wholesaling bill, active or dead, showed up in any of our source reports. Nationally though, this is the fastest-changing corner of real estate law, and populous states tend to follow the trend eventually.
- Check back on this page. We update it if anything gets introduced in Trenton.
This is analysis, not legal advice. Confirm anything you rely on with a New Jersey real estate attorney.