New Jersey Data Privacy Act (NJDPA)
New Jersey Data Privacy Act (NJDPA) compliance, effective January 15, 2025. Covers consumer rights (access, correction, deletion, portability, opt-out), controller obligations, sensitive data requirements, universal opt-out mechanism recognition, 30-day cure period (sunsets after 18 months), and AG enforcement. Keywords: NJDPA, New Jersey, data privacy, consumer rights, sensitive data, universal opt-out, AG enforcement.
New Jersey Data Privacy Act (NJDPA)
Overview
The New Jersey Data Privacy Act (S332/A1971), signed into law on January 16, 2024, and effective January 15, 2025, establishes comprehensive consumer data privacy rights for New Jersey residents. The NJDPA applies to controllers that conduct business in New Jersey or produce products or services targeted to New Jersey residents and that during a calendar year either (a) control or process the personal data of at least 100,000 consumers (excluding data processed solely for completing a payment transaction), or (b) control or process the personal data of at least 25,000 consumers and derive revenue or receive a discount on the price of goods or services from the sale of personal data.
Key Provisions
Consumer Rights (Section 6)
| Right | Description | Response Period |
|---|---|---|
| Right to access | Confirm processing and obtain a copy of personal data | 45 days (extendable by 45) |
| Right to correction | Correct inaccurate personal data | 45 days |
| Right to deletion | Delete personal data provided by or obtained about the consumer | 45 days |
| Right to data portability | Obtain personal data in a portable, readily usable format | 45 days |
| Right to opt out of sale | Opt out of the sale of personal data | 15 business days |
| Right to opt out of targeted advertising | Opt out of processing for targeted advertising purposes | 15 business days |
| Right to opt out of profiling | Opt out of profiling in furtherance of decisions that produce legal or similarly significant effects | 15 business days |
| Right to non-discrimination | Not be discriminated against for exercising rights | Ongoing |
Sensitive Data (Section 2)
The NJDPA defines sensitive data broadly, including:
- Racial or ethnic origin
- Religious beliefs
- Mental or physical health condition, treatment, or diagnosis
- Financial information (account number, credit/debit card number with required security code)
- Sex life or sexual orientation
- Citizenship or immigration status
- Status as transgender or non-binary
- Genetic or biometric data processed to identify an individual
- Personal data of a known child under 13
- Precise geolocation data
Consent requirement: Controllers must obtain consumer consent before processing sensitive data. The inclusion of financial information and immigration status as sensitive data categories distinguishes the NJDPA from many other state privacy laws.
Universal Opt-Out Mechanism (Section 8)
Controllers must recognize and comply with universal opt-out mechanisms (such as the Global Privacy Control) by July 15, 2025 (six months after the law's effective date). This applies to opt-out of sale and targeted advertising.
Controller Obligations (Section 9)
- Data minimisation: Limit collection to what is adequate, relevant, and reasonably necessary for the disclosed processing purpose.
- Purpose limitation: Do not process personal data for purposes not reasonably necessary to or compatible with the disclosed purposes without consent.
- Security: Establish, implement, and maintain reasonable administrative, technical, and physical data security practices.
- Non-discrimination: Do not process personal data in violation of state or federal anti-discrimination laws.
- Privacy notice: Provide a clear, accessible, and meaningful privacy notice disclosing categories of personal data processed, purposes, consumer rights, categories of third parties with whom data is shared, and categories of data shared.
- DPIA requirement: Conduct and document a data protection assessment for processing activities that present a heightened risk of harm (targeted advertising, sale of personal data, profiling, processing of sensitive data, processing that presents a heightened risk of harm to consumers).
Cure Period (Section 14)
The NJDPA provides a 30-day right to cure period before the AG may bring an enforcement action. This cure period sunsets 18 months after the effective date (July 15, 2026), after which the AG has full discretion on enforcement without providing a cure opportunity.
Enforcement (Section 13)
- Exclusive enforcement by the New Jersey Attorney General and Division of Consumer Affairs.
- No private right of action.
- Violations treated as unlawful practices under the New Jersey Consumer Fraud Act.
- Civil penalties up to $10,000 per initial violation and $20,000 for subsequent violations.
Comparison with Other State Privacy Laws
| Feature | NJDPA | CCPA/CPRA | CPA (Colorado) | VCDPA (Virginia) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Financial data as sensitive | Yes | No | No | No |
| Immigration status as sensitive | Yes | No | No | No |
| Transgender/non-binary status as sensitive | Yes | No | No | No |
| Universal opt-out mechanism | Required | Required | Required | Not required |
| Cure period | 30 days (sunsets) | 30 days (expired) | 60 days (sunsets) | 30 days (permanent) |
| Private right of action | No | Limited | No | No |
| DPIA requirement | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Applicability to nonprofits | No (exempt) | No (exempt) | No (exempt) | No (exempt) |
Enforcement Precedents and Regulatory Guidance
Since the NJDPA became effective in January 2025, the New Jersey AG has signaled active enforcement priorities including:
- Targeting data brokers that sell personal data without honouring opt-out requests.
- Focusing on companies processing sensitive data (particularly health and financial data) without proper consent.
- Coordination with other state AGs through the National Association of Attorneys General (NAAG) privacy working group.
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