NJ, US · AI law tracker

A3326 — NJ, US

A3326 is an AI governance legislation from NJ, currently introduced. New Jersey Assembly Bill A3326 seeks to make the use of algorithmic systems for rental pricing unlawful [1]. AIGI tracks 2 primary-source updates on this bill; the most recent was published on 2026-01-13.

Status & timeline

Regulatory stage
introduced
Bill status
introduced
Authority / governing body
New Jersey State Legislature
Chamber
house
Document type
legislation

Next deadline: No fixed deadline — the bill is currently in committee and subject to legislative process.

Subscriber only

Full obligation matrix

ActorObligationDeadlineSource
otherCease the use of algorithmic systems to influence the price and supply of residential rental units.Upon enactment

Subscriber only

Enforcement risk score

25
/ 100

Announced regulation; enforcement footprint still forming.

Subscriber only

Role-based compliance checklist

  • compliance_officer Monitor the legislative progress of NJ A3326 and its companion bill S451. (Ongoing)
  • cto Assess current systems for any algorithmic components that influence rental pricing or supply. (Upon enactment)
  • legal Prepare for the legal implications of a ban on algorithmic pricing for rental units. (Upon enactment)

Intelligence briefs (2)

legislation introduced 1/13/2026

New Jersey Bill A3326 Targets Algorithmic Residential Rental Pricing

New Jersey Assembly Bill A3326 seeks to make the use of algorithmic systems for rental pricing unlawful [1].

This signals increasing legislative scrutiny on AI applications in real estate, influencing deployer obligations regarding pricing transparency.

Deadline: No fixed deadline — the bill is currently in committee and subject to legislative process.

Primary source →
legislation in_committee 1/13/2026

New Jersey Bill A3326: Algorithmic Influence on Rental Pricing Deemed Unlawful

New Jersey A3326 proposes to make algorithmic influence on residential rental unit price and supply unlawful [1].

This development signifies a targeted legislative intervention regarding AI use in specific commercial sectors, setting a potential precedent for algorithmic market influence.

Deadline: No fixed deadline — this bill is currently proposed legislation and not yet law.

Primary source →

Frequently asked questions

What is A3326?
New Jersey Assembly Bill A3326 (2026-2027 session) proposes to prohibit the use of algorithmic systems for influencing the price and supply of residential rental units [1]. Currently under review by the Assembly Housing Committee, this legislation seeks to make such practices unlawful [1]. The bill, designated S451 in the Senate, represents a legislative effort to regulate AI applications in the housing market within the state. Primary source →
Why does A3326 matter?
This signals increasing legislative scrutiny on AI applications in real estate, influencing deployer obligations regarding pricing transparency. Primary source →
Who does A3326 affect?
This development primarily affects real estate companies, property management firms, and any organizations utilizing algorithmic tools or software to set, adjust, or recommend residential rental prices or to manage the supply of available units in New Jersey. Deployers of AI systems in the housing market, particularly those involved in multifamily housing or large-scale residential portfolios, are within scope. Considerations include the geographic nexus to New Jersey and the specific functions of deployed algorithmic systems. Primary source →
What are the key dates for A3326?
No fixed deadline — the bill is currently in committee and subject to legislative process. Primary source →
What is the current status of A3326?
As of the last published update, A3326 is at the "introduced" stage, with bill status "introduced". Primary source →
Where can I find the primary source for A3326?
The primary source for the most recent update is at https://www.njleg.state.nj.us/bill-search/2026/A3326. AIGI publishes the full citation chain plus every approved brief on this bill. Primary source →

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