Research by Ivan Tchesnokov
The Short Answer
MAYBE — NJ UCC explicitly exempts cabinet and countertop replacement; plumbing relocation, gas additions, or structural changes require permits.
New Jersey's UCC explicitly lists cabinet replacement as ordinary maintenance not requiring a permit. Plumbing relocation, new gas lines, new circuits, or structural modifications require applicable subcodes. Submit NJ Uniform Permit Application (4 copies) to 732-745-5075. NJ licensed contractors required.

New Brunswick kitchen remodel permit rules

New Jersey's NJ UCC provides important exemptions for kitchen renovation work that don't require permits: replacement of kitchen cabinets, replacement of flooring or carpet, interior and exterior painting — these are NJ UCC "ordinary maintenance" exemptions. The permit requirement is triggered when kitchen services are altered or moved: plumbing relocations (sink, dishwasher, gas line), new electrical circuits, or structural modifications. The Construction Department at 732-745-5075 can confirm whether your specific kitchen scope requires permits before you begin.

New Jersey's statewide NJ UCC explicitly lists "replacement of kitchen cabinets" as ordinary maintenance not requiring a permit — creating a clear, helpful exemption for cosmetic kitchen updates that match the NJ UCC's statewide framework. This exemption covers cabinet replacement, countertop installation, and appliance replacement at existing connections. The permit obligation arises when any service is moved or modified. Contact the Construction Department at 732-745-5075 to confirm your scope.

PSE&G serves New Brunswick for both natural gas and electricity. Adding gas for a range, extending a gas line, or converting from electric to gas cooking requires a plumbing (gas) subcode permit and NJ licensed master plumber with gas authorization. PSE&G coordinates service-side gas work. For electrical circuit additions — new countertop circuits, GFCI/AFCI upgrades, panel capacity for added kitchen loads — an electrical subcode permit and NJ licensed electrician are required. Alliant Energy's parallel role in Wisconsin is played here by PSE&G, providing both fuel sources through a single utility contact.

New Brunswick's multi-family housing stock (apartments, multi-unit buildings near Rutgers, and traditional NJ rowhouses) creates a distinct kitchen renovation market. Many New Brunswick residences are apartments or condo units in multi-family buildings — kitchen renovation permits for these units follow the same NJ UCC process but may also require building management or condominium association approval independent of the city permit. The Construction Department at 732-745-5075 handles the city permit; building ownership/management approval is a separate requirement that varies by property.

Scenario A
Cabinet and Countertop Replacement (No Service Changes)
NJ UCC exemption: replacement of kitchen cabinets is ordinary maintenance not requiring a permit in New Jersey. A homeowner replaces all cabinets and installs new countertops with all appliances reconnecting to existing connections. No permit required. Total: $15,000–$40,000. No permit fees.
No permit required | NJ UCC ordinary maintenance: cabinet replacement explicitly exempt | No permit fees
Scenario B
Kitchen Island with New Sink, Circuits, and Gas Stub
Adding a kitchen island with prep sink (plumbing relocation), new countertop circuits, and gas stub for range. Plumbing subcode + electrical subcode + plumbing (gas) subcode permits required. NJ licensed master plumber for plumbing and gas; NJ licensed electrician for circuits. PSE&G coordination for gas service. In NJ rowhouses and multi-unit buildings, drain routing through floor to common basement or first-floor plumbing provides access without concrete cutting. Total: $18,000–$45,000. Combined fees: 732-745-5075.
Plumbing + electrical + gas subcodes | NJ licensed trades | PSE&G gas coordination | NJ HIC registration | Confirm fees: 732-745-5075
Scenario C
Load-Bearing Wall Removal (Open-Plan Renovation)
A homeowner removes a load-bearing wall between kitchen and dining room for open-plan living — common in NJ rowhouses. Building subcode permit with structural documentation. Beam/post specifications required. In NJ's rowhouse construction context, shared walls with neighbors may affect structural options — the NJ licensed contractor must verify wall loading before design. Total: $30,000–$75,000 including renovation. Permit fee: 732-745-5075.
Building subcode permit | Structural documentation | Rowhouse wall considerations | NJ HIC + licensed contractor | Confirm fee: 732-745-5075

Every project is different.

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Work TypePermit?NJ Note
Cabinets, countertops, flooringNo — NJ UCC ordinary maintenance exemptionExplicitly exempt statewide under NJ UCC
Plumbing relocation (sink, drain)Yes — plumbing subcodeNJ licensed master plumber required
New gas line or stubYes — plumbing (gas) subcodePSE&G coordination; NJ licensed master plumber
New circuit or outletYes — electrical subcodeNJ licensed electrician; AFCI/GFCI per NJ UCC
Load-bearing wall removalYes — building subcodeStructural documentation; NJ HIC contractor

Do kitchen cabinets require a permit in New Brunswick?

No — New Jersey's NJ UCC explicitly lists 'replacement of kitchen cabinets' as ordinary maintenance not requiring a permit. This is a statewide NJ exemption. Permits are required when any service (plumbing, gas, electrical) is relocated or modified. Contact the Construction Department at 732-745-5075 to confirm whether your scope triggers any permit requirement.

Does adding natural gas for a range require a permit in New Brunswick?

Yes — gas line work requires a plumbing (gas) subcode permit and a NJ licensed master plumber with gas authorization. PSE&G (1-800-436-7734) coordinates service-side gas connections. Submit NJ Uniform Permit Application (4 copies) with plumbing subcode form to the Construction Department at 732-745-5075.

What NJ permits are required for kitchen plumbing relocation?

A plumbing subcode permit under the NJ UCC. Submit NJ Uniform Permit Application (4 copies) with plumbing subcode form. NJ licensed master plumber required. Four copies of the application plus a riser diagram may be required for plumbing work — contact the Construction Department at 732-745-5075 for documentation requirements.

Does NJ require AFCI for kitchen circuits?

Yes — NJ UCC requires AFCI for circuits serving habitable kitchen areas and GFCI for countertop receptacles within 6 feet of water. All new kitchen circuits must comply. The electrical inspector verifies compliance during the electrical inspection. Inspection times: 9:30 AM–3:30 PM.

How do permits work for kitchen renovations in New Brunswick apartments?

The NJ UCC permit process is the same for apartment kitchens as owner-occupied homes — submit to the Construction Department at 732-745-5075 with NJ HIC-registered and licensed contractors. However, apartment and condo renovations may also require building management or HOA approval. The city permit and building management approval are separate processes — obtain both before beginning permitted kitchen work.

What is the NJ UCC ordinary maintenance exemption for kitchens?

NJ UCC ordinary maintenance exemptions for kitchens include: replacement of kitchen cabinets, replacement of flooring or carpet, interior and exterior painting, in-place appliance replacement at existing connections, and faucet repair/replacement. Work that moves or alters plumbing services, adds gas, or modifies electrical systems is not ordinary maintenance and requires permits. Confirm your specific scope at 732-745-5075.

Disclaimer: This guide is based on research conducted in April 2026. Always verify with the Construction Department at 732-745-5075.

New Brunswick's unique residential context

New Brunswick is one of New Jersey's most historically and culturally significant cities — founded in 1730, it served as a crossing point during the Revolutionary War and was Washington's retreat route. Today it is defined by two anchor institutions: Rutgers University, the State University of New Jersey (whose main campus is centered in New Brunswick), and Johnson & Johnson, whose world headquarters have been in New Brunswick since 1886. The combination of a major research university, a global corporation, and proximity to the New York metropolitan area creates a city with a demographic diversity and economic dynamism that distinguishes it from similar-sized cities in other states.

New Brunswick's residential market reflects this complexity. The city has a large student and young professional rental market near the Rutgers College Avenue and Cook/Douglass campuses; an established Latino community centered around the Throop and French Street neighborhoods; historic districts with Victorian and Colonial Revival homes near downtown; and a working-class owner-occupant market in neighborhoods like the New Brunswick Housing Authority development areas. This variety means that building permit needs in New Brunswick span from student rental unit renovations to historic home restoration to standard suburban-style improvements — and the New Jersey Uniform Construction Code applies consistently across all of them.

New Brunswick's housing stock is predominantly multi-family — more than 75% of New Brunswick's housing units are in rental properties, reflecting the university-city dynamic. This creates an important permit consideration: the NJ UCC's statewide exemptions (roof replacement, window replacement without framing change, cabinet replacement) apply to "detached one or two-family dwellings" in many cases. Multi-family buildings, attached rowhouses, and apartment units may not qualify for all exemptions. Contact the Construction Department at 732-745-5075 to confirm which NJ UCC exemptions apply to your specific property type before assuming an exemption covers your project.

NJ Uniform Construction Code and New Brunswick permit process

The New Jersey Uniform Construction Code (UCC) is the statewide building code administered by the NJ Department of Community Affairs (DCA). All NJ municipalities enforce the same UCC, creating a consistent permitting framework across New Jersey. The UCC divides building work into subcodes: building subcode (structural work), electrical subcode, plumbing subcode, mechanical subcode, and fire protection subcode. Each subcode has its own subcode official who reviews and approves permit applications and conducts inspections in their trade area.

New Brunswick's Construction Department at 25 Kirkpatrick Street, 2nd Floor, has subcode officials for building (Michael Porter), plumbing (John Randazzo), and other trades as listed on the city's permits page. The Construction Official is Edward Grobelny. Contact the Construction Department at 732-745-5075 or constructioncode@cityofnewbrunswick.org to reach the appropriate subcode official for your trade-specific questions.

NJ requires four copies of the NJ Uniform Permit Application for New Brunswick permits. This four-copy requirement means that when you visit the Construction Department, you should bring four complete, signed copies of the application and supporting documentation. Incomplete applications or insufficient copies will delay processing. Contact the Construction Department at 732-745-5075 before your first visit to confirm exactly what documentation is needed for your specific permit scope — this simple step ensures that your application is complete on the first submission, avoiding the delay of multiple return visits to provide missing documentation.

PSE&G (Public Service Electric and Gas; 1-800-436-7734; nj.pseg.com) is the dominant utility serving New Brunswick for both electricity and natural gas. For any construction work affecting utility service — panel upgrades, gas line modifications, solar interconnection, new service installations — PSE&G must be contacted early in the project planning process. PSE&G's construction services and interconnection coordination processes can add weeks to project timelines if not initiated concurrently with the city permit process. Contact PSE&G at 1-800-436-7734 as soon as the project scope is determined to understand service coordination requirements and scheduling availability before finalizing contractor schedules and permit timelines.

NJ contractor licensing and consumer protection in New Brunswick

New Jersey's contractor licensing system, administered through the NJ Division of Consumer Affairs, is one of the most consumer-protective in the country. The NJ Home Improvement Contractor (HIC) registration requirement applies to all contractors performing home improvement work — defined broadly to include any repairs, remodeling, alterations, conversion, modernization, improvement, or addition to residential property. This registration requires proof of liability insurance and carries with it access to the NJ Consumer Fraud Act, which provides double or treble damages and attorney fees for violations. A homeowner who uses a HIC-registered contractor has significantly stronger legal recourse than one who does not.

In addition to HIC registration, trade contractors must hold trade-specific NJ licenses: NJ licensed master plumber (NJ Board of Examiners of Master Plumbers) for plumbing work, NJ licensed electrician (NJ Board of Examiners of Electrical Contractors) for electrical work, and appropriate HVAC/mechanical contractor licensing for mechanical work. These trade licenses require passing examinations, maintaining continuing education, and carrying appropriate insurance. The NJ Division of Consumer Affairs license verification website allows homeowners to check any contractor's current license status, insurance, and any disciplinary actions in real time before signing contracts.

The four-copy requirement for NJ Uniform Permit Applications in New Brunswick reflects the construction department's standard NJ DCA practice. When visiting the Construction Department at 25 Kirkpatrick Street, 2nd Floor, bring four complete, signed copies of the application, four copies of any required plans or specifications, and documentation of contractor NJ HIC registration and applicable trade licenses. The construction department staff review the application for completeness before accepting it; incomplete applications are returned and must be resubmitted, adding processing time. Allow 10–15 minutes to confirm documentation completeness before visiting — a brief call to 732-745-5075 or email to constructioncode@cityofnewbrunswick.org to confirm exactly what is needed for your specific permit scope prevents return visits for missing items.

New Brunswick's inspection schedule — 9:30 AM to 3:30 PM — requires that a representative over 18 years of age be present at the property when inspections are conducted. This is a NJ UCC standard requirement applicable throughout New Jersey. For rental property owners managing permitted work in New Brunswick without residing at the property, coordinating a representative (tenant, property manager, or the contractor) to be present during inspections is an important logistical requirement. Contact the Construction Department at 732-745-5075 to understand inspection scheduling procedures and lead times for the inspection types required by your specific permit scope.

For any permitted project in New Brunswick, the practical steps that produce the most efficient outcome: (1) Contact the Construction Department at 732-745-5075 or email constructioncode@cityofnewbrunswick.org before designing or contracting — confirm which subcodes are needed, what documentation is required, and current plan review timelines. (2) Verify all contractor credentials — NJ HIC registration and applicable trade licenses — through the NJ Division of Consumer Affairs before signing any contract. (3) Prepare complete NJ Uniform Permit Applications (4 copies of each required form) and bring all copies to 25 Kirkpatrick Street, 2nd Floor. (4) After permit issuance, schedule and pass all required inspections (9:30 AM–3:30 PM; representative over 18 must be present) as each construction phase is completed. (5) For projects involving PSE&G service coordination — panel upgrades, gas work, solar interconnection — initiate contact with PSE&G at 1-800-436-7734 concurrently with the city permit process to align timelines. Following these steps converts New Brunswick's NJ UCC permit process from a potential bureaucratic obstacle into a quality assurance mechanism that protects your investment and ensures licensed, inspected work that meets current New Jersey building standards.

City of New Brunswick Construction Department 25 Kirkpatrick Street, 2nd Floor, New Brunswick, NJ 08901
Phone: 732-745-5075 | Email: constructioncode@cityofnewbrunswick.org
Inspection times: 9:30 AM–3:30 PM
PSE&G (electric & gas): 1-800-436-7734 | nj.pseg.com
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