New Jersey CDL requirements & eligibility

A complete guide to commercial driver licensing in New Jersey — what you need to apply, the fees the New Jersey MVC charges, the age and medical rules, and how the testing process actually works.

Who issues CDLs in New Jersey?

Commercial Driver’s Licenses in New Jersey are issued by the New Jersey MVC. The New Jersey Motor Vehicle Commission (MVC) administers CDLs through commercial-license-only offices including Bakers Basin, Cardiff, Delanco, and Wayne. Port Newark drives heavy demand for container-haul CDLs. The agency operates under federal Commercial Motor Vehicle Safety Act standards, which means every requirement you read about in the FMCSA CDL Manual applies in New Jersey exactly as it does in the other 49 states — with the small set of state-specific procedural details documented on this page.

Age and eligibility

To apply for a CDL in New Jersey, you must be at least 18 for intrastate driving (operating only within the state) and 21 for interstate driving (crossing state lines or carrying interstate commerce). You must hold a valid New Jersey non-commercial driver’s license at the time of application, present proof of identity and New Jersey residency, and supply your Social Security number for verification with the federal Commercial Driver License Information System (CDLIS).

Federal regulations also require that you self-certify your operating category — non-excepted interstate, excepted interstate, non-excepted intrastate, or excepted intrastate — on the application. Non-excepted interstate applicants must additionally provide a current Medical Examiner’s Certificate (MEC, sometimes called a DOT physical card) issued by an examiner listed on the National Registry of Certified Medical Examiners. The MEC must remain current throughout the life of the CDL, and the New Jersey MVC will downgrade your CDL to a non-CDL license if it lapses.

Fees

The base CDL issuance fee in New Jersey is approximately $125, with additional charges for endorsements, knowledge tests, and skills tests. Hazmat-endorsement applicants additionally pay the federal Transportation Security Administration (TSA) threat-assessment fee — approximately $87 plus state surcharges — before the H endorsement can be added to the license. All fees are subject to change; verify current amounts on the New Jersey MVC website at the official New Jersey CDL page.

Steps to your New Jersey CDL

  1. Read the New Jersey CDL handbook from cover to cover. The handbook is free as a PDF on the New Jersey MVC website and is the definitive source for every question on the knowledge exam.
  2. Pass the Commercial Learner’s Permit (CLP) knowledge tests. At minimum you take General Knowledge; add Air Brakes, Combination Vehicles, and any endorsement exams you intend to qualify for. Drill our state-specific practice tests until you score consistently above 90%.
  3. Hold the CLP for at least 14 days as required by federal rule before taking any skills test.
  4. Complete Entry-Level Driver Training (ELDT) from a provider listed on the federal Training Provider Registry. ELDT is required for first-time Class A and Class B applicants and for upgrades or new endorsements (Hazmat, Passenger, School Bus).
  5. Pass the skills test (pre-trip inspection, basic vehicle control, on-road driving) administered by the New Jersey MVC or a certified third-party tester.
  6. Pay fees and receive your CDL. The New Jersey MVC issues the CDL with the appropriate class (A, B, or C) and any endorsements you have qualified for.

Practice tests for New Jersey

LicenseReady covers every federal CDL knowledge test in a New Jersey-specific framing. Drill the General Knowledge exam first, then move to the endorsement exams that match the work you intend to do. Each test draws from a stable seeded subset of the question bank so you can return and pick up where you left off.

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