Wholesaling Laws in New Jersey

New Jersey has tightened wholesaling rules in recent years. The New Jersey Real Estate Commission has issued guidance treating extensive wholesale activity as unlicensed brokerage. Disclosure to sellers about assignment intent is increasingly considered required practice.

Status: Restricted — additional rules apply

This is general educational information, not legal advice. Real estate law varies by state and changes frequently. Before relying on any specific claim or scaling wholesale activity, verify current rules with the New Jersey Real Estate Commission and consult a licensed New Jersey real estate attorney. New Jersey has been moving toward stricter wholesaling regulation. Consult a New Jersey real estate attorney before scaling wholesale activity in this state.

License status in New Jersey

New Jersey has tightened wholesaling rules in recent years. The New Jersey Real Estate Commission has issued guidance treating extensive wholesale activity as unlicensed brokerage. Disclosure to sellers about assignment intent is increasingly considered required practice.

Statute: N.J.S.A. § 45:15
Regulator: New Jersey Real Estate Commission

Notable rules and practices in New Jersey

  • NJREC has issued enforcement actions against wholesalers operating without licenses.
  • Newark and Camden have historically active wholesale markets.
  • Written disclosure to seller of assignment intent is best practice and may be required by enforcement standards.

Practical considerations (apply in most states including New Jersey)

  • Use a written contract that gives you an assignable equitable interest in the property before you advertise it to other buyers.
  • Avoid marketing a property you do not have under contract — most consumer-protection issues stem from advertising what you do not control.
  • Disclose to the seller in writing that you may assign the contract to another buyer, and disclose to the end buyer that you are assigning a contract (not selling property you own).
  • Use a title company or closing attorney experienced with wholesale assignments and double closes — many general-practice closers will not handle them.
  • Keep a paper trail: the original purchase contract, the assignment agreement, EMD receipts, and signed disclosures from both seller and end buyer.

Frequently asked

Is wholesaling real estate legal in this state without a license?

Most US states allow occasional contract assignment without a real estate license, because what you are selling is your contract rights — not the property itself. However, if you build a business out of repeated wholesaling, several states classify that activity as the unlicensed practice of real estate brokerage. The line between "occasional" and "in the course of business" varies by state. Always verify against the current state Real Estate Commission rules before scaling.

Do I need to disclose to the seller that I am a wholesaler?

Yes — even where state law does not require it explicitly, written disclosure is the cleanest practice. The seller should know in writing that you intend to assign the contract to a different buyer who will actually close on the property, and that you may earn an assignment fee from doing so. Several states have made this disclosure a statutory requirement.

Can I advertise a property I do not own?

In most states this is the legal-risk hotspot. Advertising specific property characteristics ("3 bed / 2 bath at 123 Main St") to attract end buyers before you have the property under contract is what gets wholesalers in trouble. Once you have an assignable contract giving you equitable interest, marketing your contract rights to potential end buyers is generally permissible.

Verify before you act

The most reliable source for current New Jersey wholesaling rules is the New Jersey Real Estate Commission itself.

Visit New Jersey Real Estate Commission →

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