logo
New Jersey Raises 'Mansion Tax'—Here's Who Is Impacted

New Jersey Raises 'Mansion Tax'—Here's Who Is Impacted

Newsweek08-07-2025
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
An amendment to New Jersey's so-called "Mansion Tax" is only a few days from going into effect, promising to force sellers in the state to pay tens of thousands of dollars in new fees for sales of properties exceeding $2 million.
What Is New Jersey's 'Mansion Tax'?
Under the current legislation, adopted in 2004, all residential properties and some commercial ones selling for more than $1 million in New Jersey are subject to a "Mansion Tax" equal to 1 percent of the purchase price, paid by buyers. The $1 million threshold has remained unchanged for the past 20 years, despite the recent surge in home prices across the country and in New Jersey.
Under the new requirements, contained in Assembly Bill 5804, the burden of the state's "Mansion Tax" moves from buyers to sellers, who will pay progressive rates for properties sold for more than $2 million. The fee on sales between $1 million and $2 million remains set at 1 percent.
For a sale price over $2 million but below $2.5 million, sellers would face a 2 percent fee—which roughly translates to an additional $40,000 expense. Properties over $3.5 million would see sellers facing a fee hike of up to 3.5 percent.
Ringwood Manor, a historic mansion in New Jersey.
Ringwood Manor, a historic mansion in New Jersey.
Getty Images
These are the progressive rates that property sales over $2 million will be subject to:
Properties costing over $1 million but not more than $2 million: 1.0 percent;
Between $2 million and $2.5 million: 2.0 percent;
Between $2.5 million and $3 million: 2.5 percent;
Between $3 million and $3.5 million: 3.0 percent;
Over $3.5 million: 3.5 percent.
Transactions affected would include those for commercial real properties, residential properties, certain farm properties with residential structures, cooperative units, and non-deed transfers involving a controlling interest in entities owning real property.
What Would Its Impact On The Market Be?
The tax hike was backed by the state's Democratic-controlled Legislature, which believes it will generate crucial revenues to support New Jersey's $58.8 billion state budget and was signed into law by Governor Phil Murphy on June 30. According to state Senator Paul Sarlo, chair of the New Jersey Senate Budget and Appropriations Committee, the "Mansion Tax" is expected to raise $282 million this fiscal year.
After Murphy signed the amendment into law, his office said that this and other changes introduced by the Legislature this year "help ensure that revenues are more closely in line with expenditures." Even so, the state's structural deficit is projected at $1.5 billion for the next year, meaning that New Jersey still spends more than it collects in revenues.
While buyers will no longer have to fear the additional fee on top of the property's price tag, sellers face higher closing costs that might force them to either cut their asking price (a home that would have sold for $1 million could now be priced at $999,999 to avoid the extra tax) or hold their listings. While price reductions would be welcomed by buyers, a reduction of the state's overall inventory would exacerbate New Jersey's shortage of homes.
Real estate professionals have been critical of the tax hike, saying that it is likely to hurt the already-struggling New Jersey housing market while offering little relief to buyers. According to real estate industry group New Jersey Realtors, the tax hike would affect only the top 3 percent of property sales in the state.
The new legislation will be applicable to transactions occurring on and after July 10.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ten civilians killed in Ukraine, while Zelensky says troops fend off major Russian advance on frontline regions
Ten civilians killed in Ukraine, while Zelensky says troops fend off major Russian advance on frontline regions

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

Ten civilians killed in Ukraine, while Zelensky says troops fend off major Russian advance on frontline regions

Russia pummeled Ukraine overnight, killing 10 and injuring as many as 61 civilians, in part of a ramped up aerial campaign to advance strongman Vladimir Putin's war into the Eastern European country. The Kremlin targeted Ukraine's frontline regions with 208 drones and 27 missiles Saturday. In the southern Dnipro region, at least three Ukrainians were killed and six others wounded in the barrage, local officials on the ground reported. 7 At least three people died in the attack on Dnipro overnight. REUTERS The strikes shattered windows in a residential building, torched cars — and on the outskirts of the city flames engulfed an obliterated shopping center obliterated by a Russian missile, causing an apocalyptic-like scene on the streets of the war-torn country. The Kremlin targeted Ukraine's frontline regions with 208 drones and 27 missiles, according to officials. 'A scary night. A massive attack on the region,' Serhiy Lysak, Dnipro's regional governor, said on Telegram. 7 A shopping mall was hit by a Russian missile strike in Dnipro. REUTERS In the northeastern Sumy region, another person was killed and three others injured, but Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said troops blocked Russian troops from gaining ground deeper into the battleground region. Russia opened a new front in Sumy in early June, deploying 50,000 troops — three times the size of Kyiv's forces in the key battleground — and capturing around a dozen border villages. The region, a priority for the Kremlin, continues to face near-daily strikes. But, up until this point, Ukrainian forces have managed to maintain control over a bulk of the region. 7 A building in Sumy hit by a Russian drone overnight. REUTERS Meanwhile, Kharkiv faced a sustained aerial bombardment on Saturday. Ukraine's second-largest city was pounded by four guided aerial bombs, two ballistic missiles and 15 drones over a three-hour period. As many as 29 people were injured, including a child, Gov. Oleh Syniehubov said. 7 Ukrainians clear debris and replace broken windows at a residential building hit in Kharkiv. Getty Images The offensive inflicted damage on high-rise apartment buildings, roadways and communication networks in the area. Four of the injured were first responders — hit in a second strike targeting emergency crews helping help people wounded in the initial attack, Ukraine's State Emergency Situations Service said. 7 Rescuers tried to protect residents as they take shelter inside a basement of a residential building during the Russian drone strike on Kharkiv. via REUTERS Zelensky vowed swift retaliation. 'Russian military enterprises, Russian logistics, and Russian airports should feel that Russia's own war is now hitting them back with real consequences,' he posted on X. 'There can be absolutely no silence in response to such strikes, and Ukrainian long-range drones ensure this.' 7 In all, at least ten people died overnight in Ukraine, as the Kremlin continued to pound on the country. X/ZelenskyyUa Zelensky also said Saturday he received a report from the head of the Foreign Intelligence Service claiming sanctions have significantly slowed Russia's economic potential. He also said Kyiv's drone production this year will exceed projections from January. Some of those drones targeted multiple regions in Russia, as Ukraine's attacks on Moscow have heated up in recent months along the more than 620-mile frontline of the war. 7 At least 61 Ukrainians were wounded overnight in the Russian attacks. X/ZelenskyyUa A drone attack on the Rostov region, near the Ukrainian border, killed two people, officials reported. Another strike hit an unspecified industrial facility in the neighboring Stavropol region. Drones also targeted Moscow but were shot down, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin reported. Russia's Defense Ministry said its air defenses shot down or intercepted 54 of Kyiv's drones in total overnight. The more than three-year-old war continued to rage on this week as both sides ended a failed third round of cease-fire talks in less than an hour Wednesday — but agreed to another planned prisoner swap. With wires

As Texas plows ahead with new maps, governors grapple with the prospect of mid-decade redistricting
As Texas plows ahead with new maps, governors grapple with the prospect of mid-decade redistricting

NBC News

timean hour ago

  • NBC News

As Texas plows ahead with new maps, governors grapple with the prospect of mid-decade redistricting

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — As Texas Republicans plow ahead with a plan to redraw congressional maps ahead of schedule, many governors are increasingly grappling with an issue that they didn't think they'd have to confront until the end of the decade. Texas' unscheduled redistricting effort — which Republicans hope could help protect their narrow House majority during next year's midterm elections — has had a ripple effect, with governors across the country floating the possibility of following suit to either add to or counter or the plan, depending on their party affiliation. At the summer meeting of the bipartisan National Governors Association in Colorado Springs, Democrats largely condemned the efforts in Texas while cheering on efforts by members of their own party in other states. 'It's deplorable,' New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy, a Democrat, said in an interview on the sidelines of the summit, referring to Texas Republicans' attempt. When it came to threats by Democratic Govs. Gavin Newsom of California and Kathy Hochul of New York to forge ahead with plans to redraw congressional lines in their states, Murphy added, 'I don't think we have a choice.' 'If they're going to play these games, we're going to have to be just as aggressive,' Murphy said, adding that 'we can't bring a knife to a gunfight.' Asked if he'd condone a redistricting effort in New Jersey, Murphy said 'all options are on the table in New Jersey,' though he acknowledged that there were major obstacles to doing so. 'I fear there are significant constitutional constraints here in our own [state] constitution,' he said. In New Jersey, like in many other states, an independent commission oversees redistricting. 'But we are looking at all options — and we have to, as Democrats. If this is the way the other guys are going to go, we have to respond forcefully,' Murphy said. 'We have no choice.' Hawaii's Democratic Gov. Josh Green called the actions by Texas Republicans 'really sinister,' 'unconscionable' and 'completely unethical,' and called on his fellow Democratic governors to 'fight fire with fire.' 'It's an obvious attempt to steal elections,' Green said, though he also said that 'the Democratic Party can't stand by and watch it happen.' 'It's very unfortunate, because two wrongs don't make a right. But we can't allow one party to break the rules and then consistently in the future break more rules,' he added. 'It's turning into a knife fight,' Green said. Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott kicked off a special legislative session on Monday, with congressional redistricting one of the topics on lawmakers' to-do list. The New York Times reported last month that members of Trump's political operation had privately urged Texas Republicans to redraw their maps ahead of the 2026 midterms. And Trump himself has publicly praised the efforts, urging Texas lawmakers to take actions that would help the GOP gain five House seats. Republicans currently control 25 of Texas' 38 congressional districts. The redistricting process typically occurs at the start of each new decade, when new census data is available. Texas' current maps were drawn in 2021, following the 2020 census, though they are still being fought over in court. The Republican effort in Texas has prompted some Democrats to fight back by threatening their own mid-decade redistricting schemes. Most prominently, Newsom, a potential 2028 presidential contender, has raised the idea of redrawing California's maps. But that effort would come with major obstacles: An independent commission controls the redistricting process in California, not the governor. On Thursday, Hochul entered the fray as well, responding to a question about redistricting in New York by saying: 'All's fair in love and war,' according to Politico. While not promising action, she added that she'd 'look at it closely with' House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y. Elsewhere, Illinois' Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker responded to a question about whether his state should pursue redistricting to counterbalance Texas' push by accusing Republicans of trying to 'cheat' ahead of the midterms. And a spokesman for Maryland's Democratic Gov. Wes Moore told The New York Times this week he will 'continue to evaluate all options.' On the other side of the aisle, just days after the state Supreme Court upheld the state's newest congressional map, Florida's Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis said that 'there may be more defects that need to be remedied.' He added that population shifts in the state since the census has led him to believe the state is 'malapportioned' and that it 'would be appropriate to do a redistricting here in the mid-decade.' And in Ohio, state lawmakers are required to draw new congressional maps before 2026 because their current lines passed without bipartisan support. Republicans control 10 of Ohio's 15 House seats. Other Democratic leaders at the NGA did not urge their party's fellow governors to move forward with their own redistricting plans. 'I would really call upon Texas Republicans to not yield to the temptation and to stick with the map that they themselves drew that benefits Republicans in the Texas delegation and continue with that until the normal redistricting period occurs at the end of the decade,' Colorado Gov. Jared Polis said in an interview. In Colorado, like in California, redistricting efforts are overseen by an independent commission. Meanwhile, some Republicans at the NGA expressed displeasure with the redistricting threats from both parties. 'I'll be perfectly honest. I only think about it once every 10 years,' Utah GOP Gov. Spencer Cox said in an interview. 'Obviously, there's concerns about gerrymandering, and both sides are doing it — you know, nobody has clean hands.' 'I don't love it. I wish there was a better way. I wish there was a nonpartisan way. Lots of states have tried,' Cox added. Former Colorado Gov. Bill Owens, a Republican, said he'd refuse to condemn Texas' efforts, even though he himself helped Colorado advance its own independent redistricting commission. 'So long as so many Democratic states still redistrict the old-fashioned way, so will Republican states. So I have no criticism for Texas, given that they're working within the same rules that have governed so many states — Democrats and Republicans — in the past,' Owens said. He added that his own approach, if he were still governor, 'would be to try to do redistricting in a bipartisan fashion.'

Alina Habba Defies Judges' Ouster: 'Broken'
Alina Habba Defies Judges' Ouster: 'Broken'

Newsweek

time2 hours ago

  • Newsweek

Alina Habba Defies Judges' Ouster: 'Broken'

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Alina Habba, former personal defense lawyer to President Donald Trump, is pushing back forcefully against efforts to remove her from her post as U.S. Attorney for New Jersey—vowing to fight what she describes as a politically motivated campaign to oust her. "To put it in really simple terms, it's a complicated mechanism—what's happening—and it's, frankly, I think, a broken one," she said during an interview with political commentator Benny Johnson. Why It Matters It comes after a panel of federal judges in New Jersey declined to extend Habba's term as the state's interim top prosecutor. Trump tapped Habba to serve as interim U.S. attorney in late March and nominated her on July 1 to be the U.S. attorney in a permanent capacity, which would have removed her interim status by the end of this week. But a DOJ spokesperson told The New York Times on Thursday that the president has withdrawn her nomination, which will allow her to continue serving in a temporary capacity. Alina Habba speaks before Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump at a campaign rally in Allentown, Pa., Tuesday, Oct. 29, 2024. Alina Habba speaks before Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump at a campaign rally in Allentown, Pa., Tuesday, Oct. 29, 2024. Matt Rourke/AP What To Know During the interview, Habba said the Senate's blue slip courtesy—a nonbinding tradition—is being used to block presidential appointments of U.S. attorneys, which she says effectively amounts to stalling or undermining the president's authority. The blue slip tradition is a Senate custom that gives home-state senators significant influence over federal judicial and U.S. attorney nominations in their state. It allows a senator to approve or block a nominee by returning or withholding a blue-colored form, known as the "blue slip," to the Senate Judiciary Committee. In Habba's case, both of New Jersey's Democratic senators, Cory Booker and Andy Kim, withheld their blue slips, signaling formal opposition and preventing her nomination from moving forward through the Senate Judiciary Committee. Booker and Kim allege that she has pursued politically motivated prosecutions against Democratic lawmakers to serve Trump's agenda. During Habba's tenure as interim U.S. Attorney for the District of New Jersey, Mayor Ras Baraka of Newark was charged with trespassing following a congressional visit to an immigration detention facility. The case was dropped days later, and a federal judge condemned the arrest as a "worrisome misstep," warning it should not be used as a political tool. Meanwhile, Representative LaMonica McIver was charged with assaulting federal agents during the same protest. McIver and critics called the prosecution politically motivated, especially given her congressional oversight role. Legal experts observed the case appeared "spectacularly inappropriate," claiming Habba bypassed required DOJ supervisory approval for charges against elected officials. Habba also launched investigations into Democratic Governor Phil Murphy and Attorney General Matt Platkin, focused on New Jersey's decision to limit cooperation with federal immigration enforcement—a move viewed by critics as aligned with Trump's political priorities. But Habba said the decision to remove her from her post was an attempt to thwart President Trump's powers. "What we're seeing is a systemic problem, where they are using the blue slip courtesy—it's not a law—as a mechanism to block the appointment of U.S. attorneys by the president, per the Department of Justice," Habba said. "That puts those U.S. attorneys in a position where they're kind of stuck. You're in this freeze, and you can't get out. Then they'll run the clock on you, and basically, what ends up happening is they're attempting to thwart the president's powers. "What we saw in my situation, the Senate minority leader sent direct instructions on Twitter telling the judges to vote and block me. Once it's out of Senate ownership, the judges can vote to keep you. I stepped down as interim and am now the acting attorney.. You have 120 days in the interim, I stepped down the day before." Trump has the power to remove U.S. attorneys who have been appointed by judges. A panel of federal judges in New Jersey ruled on Tuesday to replace Habba with her handpicked top deputy in the U.S. attorney's office, Desiree Leigh Grace, after her 120 day term was up. Soon after the court's decision, the Justice Department, led by Attorney General Pam Bondi, fired Grace and accused the judges of political bias meant to curb the president's authority. In response, Trump's team withdrew Habba's nomination for the permanent role—allowing her to resign as interim U.S. Attorney, then be appointed First Assistant U.S. Attorney, and automatically ascend to the role of acting U.S. Attorney under relevant vacancy laws, extending her tenure for another 210 days. What People Are Saying Harrison Fields, a White House spokesperson, previously told Newsweek in a statement: "President Trump has full confidence in Alina Habba, whose work as acting U.S. Attorney for the District of New Jersey has made the Garden State and the nation safer. The Trump Administration looks forward to her final confirmation in the U.S. Senate and will work tirelessly to ensure the people of New Jersey are well represented." What Happens Next Habba will remain in her role as interim U.S. attorney in New Jersey for at least the next 210 days.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store