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Average Credit Card Debt in New Jersey [2026]: $7,600 and What It Means

State-specific rules, federal court data, and practical guidance for New Jersey residents.

New Jersey Credit Card Debt Snapshot

Per Experian State of Credit and Federal Reserve regional data, New Jersey card-holders carry approximately $7,600 on average per active credit card account. Median household income in New Jersey is roughly $97,100 (ACS 2022).

MetricNew Jersey ValueNational Context
Avg credit card debt (per card-holder)$7,600US avg approx $6,500
Median household income$97,100US approx $74,500
Monthly income (median / 12)$8,091
CC debt as % of monthly income94%Credit strain indicator

A single month of income typically needs to cover rent/mortgage, food, utilities, transport, insurance, and childcare. A CC balance equal to or greater than a month of income is a flashing hardship signal, not a ratio you can "earn down" quickly without structural relief.

Statute of Limitations for Credit Card Debt in New Jersey

Credit card debt in New Jersey is governed by the statute of limitations: 6 years. After the SOL runs, the creditor or junk-debt buyer can still try to collect, but they cannot obtain a valid judgment if you raise the SOL defense in a timely answer.

  • Clock start: Usually the date of last activity (payment or charge) on the account. State-by-state variation exists.
  • Reset risk: Any acknowledgment, partial payment, or promise to pay can restart the SOL in some New Jersey courts.
  • Zombie debt: After SOL, debt buyers (Midland, LVNV, Portfolio Recovery) still file suits hoping you default. Appear and raise the SOL.

See 2026 national statistics and New Jersey credit card bankruptcy overlay.

New Jersey Credit Card Debt vs. Income: Breaking Point

Credit counselors, bankruptcy attorneys, and the CFPB all use similar rules of thumb to identify structural debt distress:

  • CC debt > 15% of gross annual income: serious warning. For New Jersey, that threshold is $14,565.
  • Monthly minimums > 20% of take-home: means-test / DMP territory.
  • Back-end DTI > 43%: disqualifies most conventional / FHA mortgages and signals bankruptcy territory.

The average New Jersey card-holder carrying $7,600 at a 24% APR pays roughly $152/month just in interest before principal reduction.

New Jersey Federal Bankruptcy Data

Chapter 7 filing volume is a real stress signal for New Jersey credit card debt. Higher per-capita Ch7 filings typically correlate with higher charge-off and settlement demand.

Numbers below come from the Federal Judicial Center Integrated Database covering 1,580 consumer bankruptcy cases from New Jersey's federal bankruptcy courts.

ChapterCases FiledDischarge RateDismissal Rate
Chapter 752697.3%2.7%
Chapter 131,05431.0%68.8%

Rates computed on resolved cases only. Source: FJC Integrated Database.

Options When CC Debt Overwhelms Income in New Jersey

  1. Hardship program (direct with issuer). Free; no credit damage beyond existing. Most major issuers offer 6-12 month APR reduction or forbearance.
  2. Nonprofit credit counseling (DMP). Consolidates payments, no new debt. Small monthly admin fee. See New Jersey options.
  3. Debt settlement. 40-60% payoffs typical; heavy credit damage; may trigger 1099-C at $3,800+ forgiveness. See New Jersey 1099-C treatment.
  4. Chapter 7 bankruptcy. Complete discharge of unsecured CC debt; means test applies to New Jersey median income.
  5. Chapter 13 bankruptcy. 3- or 5-year plan; 0-100% repayment to unsecured depending on disposable income.