New Jersey Vehicle Registration Cost
New Jersey's registration system is structurally simple — a clean weight × age tier ($46.50, $59, $71.50, or $84/year) plus a flat 6.625% statewide sales tax with no local additions and full trade-in credit. The two quirks that surprise new residents: (1) new vehicles must register for 4 YEARS upfront — dealers collect ~$336 for the 4-year passenger registration at purchase, not as an annual bill, and (2) effective July 2026, battery EVs pay a $250/year surcharge (collected as $1,000 upfront on new EVs) — a major reversal from the prior decade when NJ had no EV surcharge at all. The 0.4% Luxury and Fuel-Inefficient Vehicle Surcharge (LFIS) adds about $140 to a $35,000 vehicle if it's classified as fuel-inefficient (under 19 MPG); not applicable to a typical mid-sized sedan. A new $35,000 vehicle in NJ runs about $2,488 in first-year costs, with annual renewals around $84.
Calculate your cost
Itemized breakdown
| Passenger Registration Fee (model year within 2 years) (annual) | $84 |
| Title Fee | $60 |
| License Plate Fee | $25 |
| Sales Tax | $2,319 |
| First-year total | $2,488 |
| Annual renewal thereafter | $84 |
How New Jersey calculates registration
- Passenger Registration Fee (model year within 2 years) — Tiered by weight (annual) Per NJSA 39:3-8 and NJMVC fee table. New vehicles (model year within 2 years of registration) pay $59/year if under 3,500 lbs or $84/year if over. Older vehicles (model year 3+ years old) pay $46.50/$71.50 respectively. New vehicles in NJ must register for 4 YEARS upfront — your dealer collects $336 (= $84 × 4) at purchase, not an annual bill. Senior citizens (65+) and persons with disabilities get a $7 discount per category.
- Title Fee — $60 (one-time) $60 standard; $85 if the vehicle has a lienholder (financed).
- License Plate Fee — $25 (one-time) One-time fee for a new standard 2-plate set. Plate transfer from another vehicle you already own is $10.
Sales tax
New Jersey charges 6.625% state sales tax . Trade-in credit: full. Tax basis: purchase price.
New Jersey charges 6.625% statewide vehicle sales tax with full trade-in credit and NO local additions — every NJ county pays the same rate. Vehicles purchased for $45,000 or more, or vehicles with EPA fuel efficiency below 19 MPG, also owe a one-time 0.4% Luxury and Fuel-Inefficient Vehicle Surcharge (LFIS) per NJSA 54:32B-26.4 — collected separately by the MVC.
Electric vehicle surcharge
New Jersey charges an additional $270/year for electric vehicles.
Per P.L. 2024, c.7 (signed March 26, 2024). Battery EVs pay a ZEV surcharge effective July 1, 2024. Schedule: 7/1/24-6/30/25 $250; 7/1/25-6/30/26 $260; 7/1/26-6/30/27 $270; 7/1/27-6/30/28 $280; 7/1/28+ $290 (cap). New vehicle registrations require 4 years paid upfront ($1,080 for 2026). Plug-in hybrids and conventional hybrids do NOT pay this surcharge. NJ also ended its EV sales tax exemption on July 1, 2025 — EVs now pay full 6.625% sales tax.
What makes New Jersey distinctive
- New vehicles in New Jersey must register for 4 YEARS upfront as a single payment, not as an annual fee. A typical new sedan registration in 2026 costs $336 (= $84 × 4 years) paid to the dealer at purchase. After 4 years, the vehicle drops into the "older than 2 years" tier and renews annually at the lower rate.
- New Jersey reversed course on EVs in July 2026: a $250/year surcharge (collected as $1,000 upfront on new EVs covering 4 years) now applies to battery EVs under P.L. 2023, c.79. For most of the 2010s and early 2020s, NJ was one of the most EV-friendly states in the country with no surcharge and a sales tax exemption — that exemption was also rolled back in 2024.
- New Jersey is one of the few states with NO local sales tax — anywhere in the state. The 6.625% state rate applies uniformly from Cape May to High Point. This is unusual among East Coast states (NY, PA, MA, CT all have local variations).
- The Luxury and Fuel-Inefficient Vehicle Surcharge (LFIS) of 0.4% applies to passenger vehicles priced at $45,000+ OR with EPA fuel efficiency below 19 MPG. Per NJSA 54:32B-26.4, it's a one-time surcharge at registration — about $200 on a $50,000 vehicle.
- Senior citizens age 65+ and persons with disabilities receive a $7 discount on the annual passenger registration fee per NJMVC fee schedule — a modest but ongoing reduction across all weight × age tiers.
Frequently asked questions about New Jersey vehicle registration
How much does it cost to register a car in New Jersey?
Registering a new $35,000 passenger vehicle in New Jersey costs approximately $2,488 in the first year, including sales tax, title, registration, and any applicable state surcharges. Annual renewal in subsequent years drops to roughly $84 once one-time fees like title and sales tax are paid.
What is the sales tax on a vehicle purchase in New Jersey?
New Jersey charges a 6.625% state sales tax with no local additions. Trade-in credit treatment is "full", applied to the purchase price.
Does New Jersey have an electric vehicle registration fee?
Yes — New Jersey charges $270/year extra for battery electric vehicles in addition to standard registration fees, to compensate for lost gas tax revenue. Per P.L. 2024, c.7 (signed March 26, 2024). Battery EVs pay a ZEV surcharge effective July 1, 2024. Schedule: 7/1/24-6/30/25 $250; 7/1/25-6/30/26 $260; 7/1/26-6/30/27 $270; 7/1/27-6/30/28 $280; 7/1/28+ $290 (cap). New vehicle registrations require 4 years paid upfront ($1,080 for 2026). Plug-in hybrids and conventional hybrids do NOT pay this surcharge. NJ also ended its EV sales tax exemption on July 1, 2025 — EVs now pay full 6.625% sales tax.
How much is annual vehicle registration renewal in New Jersey?
Annual registration renewal in New Jersey for a typical passenger vehicle is approximately $84, covering registration fees, plate fees, and any annual ad valorem or surcharges. This excludes one-time costs like sales tax and title fee paid only at initial registration.
Where do I register my vehicle in New Jersey?
Vehicle registration in New Jersey is handled by the NJMVC. Fees are uniform statewide. See the NJMVC website for the official fee schedule, online renewal options, and required documents.
Where New Jersey ranks
How New Jersey stacks up against the other 49 states on our top lists.
Official sources: NJMVC • Official fee calculator
Data last updated: 2026-05-23