Campaign finance requirements in New Jersey

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Campaign finance requirements govern how much money candidates and campaigns may receive from individuals and organizations, how they must report those contributions, and how much individuals, organizations, and political parties may contribute to campaigns. In addition to direct campaign contributions, campaign finance laws also apply to third-party organizations and nonprofit organizations that seek to influence elections through independent expenditures or issue advocacy.

This page provides background on campaign finance regulation, lists contribution limits to state candidates and ballot measures in New Jersey, compares contribution limits to gubernatorial and state legislative candidates in New Jerseywith those from other states, and details the candidate reporting requirements in New Jersey.

The information on this page pertains to candidates for state office and state ballot measures. Candidates for federal office are subject to federal campaign finance law. Candidates for local office are subject to all applicable state laws as well as any separate local campaign finance regulations.[1]

As of August 2025:
  • Individuals could contribute $5,800 per election to gubernatorial candidates, $5,500 per election to other statewide candidates, $5,500 per election to state senate candidates, and $5,500 per election to state house candidates.
  • State parties could contribute unlimitedly to candidates for New Jersey state office.
  • Political committees could contribute $17,300 per election to candidates for New Jersey state office.
  • Corporations and union contribution limits to candidates for state office matched individual contribution limits.
  • Background

    Seal of the United States Federal Election Commission

    The Federal Election Commission (FEC) is the independent regulatory agency that administers and enforces federal campaign election laws. The FEC is responsible for disclosing campaign finance information, enforcing limits and prohibitions on contributions, and overseeing public funding of presidential elections.[2] According to the FEC, an individual becomes a federal candidate and must begin reporting campaign finances once he or she has either raised or spent $5,000 in his or her campaign. Within 15 days of this benchmark, the candidate must register with the FEC and designate an official campaign committee, which is responsible for the funds and expenditures of the campaign. This committee must have an official treasurer and cannot support any candidate but the one who registered it. Detailed financial reports are then made to the FEC every financial quarter after the individual is registered. Reports are also made before primaries and before the general election.[3]

    The rules governing federal election campaigns and contributions have evolved over the past generation as result of a number of Supreme Court decisions. In the 2010 Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission decision, the court held that corporate funding of independent political broadcasts in candidate elections cannot be limited. The court's decision also overturned the ban on for-profit and not-for-profit corporations and unions broadcasting electioneering communications in the 30 days before a presidential primary and in the 60 days before a general election.[4] In the SpeechNOW.org v. Federal Election Commission decision, the first application of the Citizens United decision, the court held that contribution limits on what individuals could give to independent expenditure-only groups, and the amount these organizations could receive, were unconstitutional. Contribution limits on donations directly to candidates, however, reNew Jerseyd unchanged.[5][6] In 2014's McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission decision, the court overturned biennial aggregate campaign contribution limits, and held that individuals may contribute to as many federal candidates as they want, but may only contribute up to the federal limit in each case.[7]

    While the FEC governs federal election campaigns and contribution limits, individual states enforce their own regulation and reporting requirements. Regulations vary by state, as do limits on campaign contributions and third-party activities to influence elections. Candidates for local office must follow any applicable state and local campaign finance regulations.

    Contribution limits

    The table below details contribution limits as they applied to various types of individuals and groups in New Jersey as of August 2025. The uppermost row of the table indicates the contributor, while the leftmost column indicates the recipient.

    New Jersey contribution limits as of August 2025
      Individuals Single candidates committees Political committees Legislative leadership committee Political Party Super PACs Corporations Unions
    Governor $5,800 $17,300 $17,300 unlimited unlimited $0 $5,800 $5,800
    Statewide Candidate $5,500 $17,300 $17,300 unlimited unlimited $0 $5,500 $5,500
    Senate candidate $5,500 $17,300 $17,300 unlimited unlimited $0 $5,500 $5,500
    Assembly $5,500 $17,300 $17,300 unlimited unlimited $0 $5,500 $5,500
    Political committees $15,200 $15,200 $15,200 unlimited unlimited $0 $15,200 $15,200
    Party committees $79,000 $79,000 $79,000 unlimited unlimited $0 $79,000 $79,000
    Legislative Leadership Committee $79,000 $79,000 $79,000 unlimited unlimited $0 $79,000 $79,000
    Ballot measures unlimited unlimited unlimited unlimited unlimited $0 unlimited unlimited
    Limits apply per election.
    Sources: 'New Jersey Election Law Enforcement Commission, "Contribution Limits Chart," accessed August 13, 2025

    State comparisons in the 2024 elections

    See also: State-by-state comparison of campaign finance requirements

    As of the 2024 elections, there were no individual contribution limits on contributions to gubernatorial or state legislative candidates in 12 states. The remaining 38 states, including New Jersey, had varying limits.


    New Jersey

    Individual contribution limits in New Jersey:

    • Governor: $4,900 per election
    • State Senate: $2,600 per election
    • State House: $2,600 per election
    Comparison to other states

    In other states with individual contribution limits:

    • Governor
    • State Senate
      • Minimum: $200 per election (Colorado)
      • Maximum: $15,499.69 per election (Ohio)
    • State House
      • Minimum: $200 per election (Colorado)
      • Maximum: $15,499.69 per election (Ohio)



    Candidate reporting requirements

    Seal of New Jersey

    DocumentIcon.jpg See statutes: Title 19, Article 44 of the New Jersey Permanent Statutes

    Candidates for all elected public offices in New Jersey must file reports of their campaign financial activity with the New Jersey Election Law Enforcement Commission. Candidates for federal office are not required to file with the commission.

    Each candidate is required to appoint a treasurer (a candidate may serve as his or her own treasurer) and create a campaign depository (a bank account) and file this information with the commission. Candidates must establish a reporting committee, which has the sole name under which a candidate receives contributions, makes expenditures, labels its political identification statements, or otherwise does business. It is recommended that the name of the campaign depository should also be the same as the name of the committee. No later than 10 days after establishing a candidate committee, the candidate must file the "Single Candidate Committee Certificate of Organization and Designation of Campaign Treasurer and Depository" with the Commission.[9][10]

    An organizational or campaign treasurer or deputy organizational or campaign treasurer of a candidate committee or joint candidates committee must keep a written record of all funds received as contributions. This must include the following:

    • the name and mailing address of the contributor
    • the amount and date of the contribution
    • if the contributor is an individual, the occupation of the individual and the name and mailing address of the individual's employer[11]

    Reporting requirements

    A candidate committee must begin filing reports with the commission on a date that depends upon when the committee's financial activity commences. If a candidate committee is begun within five months or less of the due date of the 29-day pre-election report, the committee must file a 29-day pre-election report as the initial election fund report. If the committee is established more than five months prior to the due date of the 29-day pre-election report, the committee must file a quarterly report as its initial election fund report.[12]

    The forms that a candidate must file depend upon the committee type (single or joint) and the amount of money that will be spent in the election.[13]

    Reporting schedule

    During the period between the appointment of the campaign treasurer and the election, the campaign treasurer must file a cumulative campaign report on three separate dates:

    • the 29th day preceding the election
    • the 11th day preceding the election
    • the 20th day after the election

    Concurrent with the report filed on the 20th day following an election, or at any time thereafter, the treasurer may certify to the commission that the election fund of the committee has settled its business and been dissolved, or that business regarding the election has been settled up but the committee will continue for the deposit and use of contributions.[14]

    Campaign finance legislation

    The table below displays bills related to campaign finance introduced during or carried over to New Jersey's current legislative session.[15]

    Election and campaign ballot measures

    See also: Elections and campaigns on the ballot and List of New Jersey ballot measures

    Ballotpedia has tracked 7 statewide ballot measures relating to elections and campaigns.

    1. New Jersey Supreme Court Elections and Tenure Amendment (2014)
    2. New Jersey Election of Comptroller and Elimination of Auditor Amendment (2014)
    3. New Jersey Public Question No. 2 (1974)
    4. New Jersey Public Question No. 1 (1970)
    5. New Jersey Public Question No. 2 (1969)
    6. New Jersey Public Question No. 4 (1963)
    7. New Jersey Public Question No. 1 (1957)


    Election administration agencies

    Election agencies

    Seal of the U.S. Election Assistance Commission
    See also: State election agencies

    Individuals seeking additional information about election administration in New Jersey can contact the following local, state, and federal agencies.

    New Jersey County Election Officials

    Click here for a list

    Secretary of State, Elections Division

    Physical Address: 20 West State Street, 5th Floor
    Trenton, New Jersey 08608
    Mailing Address: P.O. Box 304
    Trenton, New Jersey 08625-0304
    Phone: 609-292-3760
    Toll free: 1-877-658-6837
    Fax: 609-777-1280
    Email: nj.elections@sos.nj.gov
    Website: https://www.nj.gov/state/elections/vote.shtml

    New Jersey Election Law Enforcement Commission

    Physical Address: 25 S Stockton St, 5th Floor
    Trenton, New Jersey 08608
    Mailing Address: P.O. Box 185
    Trenton, New Jersey 08625-0185
    Phone: 609-292-8700

    U.S. Election Assistance Commission

    633 3rd Street NW, Suite 200
    Washington, DC 20001
    Phone: 301-563-3919
    Toll free: 1-866-747-1471
    Email: clearinghouse@eac.gov
    Website: https://www.eac.gov

    Federal Election Commission (FEC)

    1050 First Street, NE
    Washington, DC 20463
    Telephone: (202)-694-1100
    Toll-free: 1-800-424-9530
    Email: info@fec.gov
    Website: http://www.fec.gov/

    Recent news

    The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms New Jersey finance. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.

    See also

    Footnotes