A short check-in, a freshly dated letter, and your New Jersey housing protections stay airtight.
ESA letters don’t expire by statute, but New Jersey housing providers expect current documentation — most look for a letter dated within the past 12 months.
The 12-month expectation holds everywhere in New Jersey — Newark, Jersey City, Trenton and Atlantic City included — so the rhythm below applies statewide.
Lease renewals, building transfers, and new applications are when New Jersey landlords look hardest at dates. Renewing two to four weeks before you need the letter keeps everything current without a scramble.
A short telehealth check-in with a mental health professional licensed in New Jersey confirms your circumstances. If renewal is appropriate, your updated, freshly dated letter — with the professional’s active New Jersey license details — arrives in 10–15 minutes after approval.
No hidden fees · HIPAA secure · Pay only if approved.
Yes — it’s a shorter re-evaluation confirming your circumstances, and an approved updated letter is delivered in 10–15 minutes.
The same flat rates apply — and the same rule: no approval, no charge.
Absolutely — the renewal evaluation stands on its own, so it doesn’t matter where your first letter came from, as long as a New Jersey-licensed professional approves the new one.
No — renewal is between you and the professional. You decide when and how to share the updated letter.
A current date, the professional’s active license details, and confirmation that the accommodation still fits your circumstances.
Free pre-screening · Licensed in New Jersey · You only pay if approved
Start Your Evaluation