New Jersey Legislature Enacts the First Consumer Privacy Law of 2024


On January 16, 2024, New Jersey’s Governor signed Senate Bill (SB) 332, which establishes a consumer data privacy law for the state. New Jersey becomes the 13th state to pass a consumer data consumer privacy law. The law would take effect one year after its enactment, on January 16, 2025.

To whom does the law apply?

The law applies to controllers defined as an individual or legal entity that alone or jointly with others determines the purpose and means of processing personal data that do business in New Jersey or produce products or services targeted at New Jersey residents and that during a calendar year either:

Who is protected by the law?

Under the law covered consumer is defined as a person who is a resident of New Jersey acting only in an individual or household context. Like several other states, excluding California, the consumer does not include a person acting in a commercial or employment context.

What data is protected by the law?

The law will protect data that qualifies as “personal data” which is information that is linked or reasonably linkable to an identified or identifiable person. It does not include de-identified data or publicly available information.

What are the rights of consumers?

Under the law, a consumer has the following rights:

What obligations do businesses have?

A controller shall provide a consumer with a reasonably accessible, clear, and meaningful privacy notice that shall include but may not be limited to:

If the controller sells personal data to third parties or processes personal data for purposes of targeted advertising, the sale of personal data, or profiling on a consumer, the controller shall clearly and conspicuously disclose such sale or processing, as well as the manner in which a consumer may opt out of the sale or processing.

A controller must respond to a verified consumer rights request from a consumer within 45 days of the controller’s receipt of the request. The controller may extend the response period by 45 additional days when reasonably necessary considering the complexity and number of the consumer’s requests.

How is the law enforced?

The attorney general shall have sole and exclusive authority to enforce a violation of the statute.


Jackson Lewis P.C. © 2025
National Law Review, Volume XIV, Number 18