Bergen County Superior Court
Bergen County Superior Court — address, phone, hours, judges, vicinage, and Avery & Avery practice notes. (201) 943-2445.
Hours
| Mon-Fri | 8:30 AM - 4:30 PM |
|---|---|
| Sat-Sun | Closed |
Vicinage / System
Vicinage 2 — Bergen
Superior Court
How Avery & Avery Practices Here
Bergen's 70 municipalities funnel indictable matters here. Civil filings clear through the Bergen County Clerk at the Justice Center; Surrogate filings clear across Court Street.
A Former Judge. A Father-Son Trial Firm. Fifty Years of New Jersey Practice.
Bergen County Superior Court — the canonical address, phone, hours, and Avery & Avery practice-notes anchor.
The Hackensack courthouse complex on Main Street is the legal hub of Bergen County — Bergen’s 70 municipalities funnel indictable cases here. The firm’s Ridgefield base sits 8 miles southeast.
Bergen County Clerk’s Office (Justice Center, 10 Main Street) handles civil filings; Surrogate’s Office is across Court Street.
Address and contact
- Name: Bergen County Superior Court
- Address: Bergen County Justice Center, 10 Main Street, Hackensack, NJ 07601
- Phone: (201) 221-0700
- Vicinage: Bergen Vicinage (Vicinage 02)
- Divisions: Civil, Criminal, Family, Chancery
What this courthouse hears
Bergen County Superior Court is a Superior court. It hears indictable criminal matters, contested civil disputes over $20,000, divorces and custody disputes, chancery equity, Special Civil Part landlord-tenant matters, and probate contests.
How matters are routed here
For indictable matters arising in the Bergen (Vicinage 02) jurisdiction, defense filings, motions, and appearances all proceed at this courthouse complex.
Trial-de-novo appeals from municipal-court convictions in the vicinage proceed to this Superior Court Law Division.
Notes from our practice
Robert W. Avery served fifteen years as Judge of the Ridgefield Municipal Court (1986–2000). Across two generations and fifty years of New Jersey practice, Avery & Avery, Esqs. has appeared at this courthouse — and at the sister courts across Bergen County — on a regular basis. Where calendar tendencies, prosecutorial offer patterns, and judge dispositions matter, that depth is the basis of strategy.
If you have a matter scheduled at Bergen County Superior Court, call (201) 943-2445 for a free first consultation. Same-day callbacks during business hours.
Practical tips for appearances
Hackensack’s Main Street courthouse complex is bordered by Anderson Street and the Bergen County administration buildings. Metered street parking around the complex turns over within an hour during morning calendar; the Bergen County parking deck on State Street is the safer bet at $5/hour.
- Photo identification is mandatory at NJ courthouse entry. NJ driver’s license, passport, or state non-driver ID covers municipal entry; federal facilities additionally accept military ID.
- Phones are silenced or surrendered. Some municipal sessions collect phones at security; others permit silenced phones once in the courtroom. The entry-desk officer’s instruction governs.
- Business attire moves the calendar. Judges and calendar staff notice — clerks have visible discretion in how quickly a matter is reached when the courtroom is overpacked.
- Documents in triplicate. Court keeps one set, you keep one, and a third covers co-defendants or pre-marked exhibits. Tab labels save courtroom time.
- Arrive 30 minutes before scheduled call. The first calendar call typically runs at the top of the hour; missing it pushes the matter to the back of the day’s docket.
- Confirm calendar position the morning of. Many vicinages publish day-of-assignments on njcourts.gov or vicinage portals.
- Parking turn-over is short. Allow 15-20 minutes to clear parking, walk, and security — courthouse-adjacent meters are heavily enforced.
Surrounding court complex
This courthouse sits within a multi-building NJ judicial complex that typically includes:
- The Superior Court itself (this entry)
- The Bergen County Surrogate’s Court — uncontested probate, executor qualification, minor guardianship
- The Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office — indictable charge prosecution; PTI applications under N.J.S.A. 2C:43-12
- The Bergen County Sheriff’s Office — service of process, courthouse security
- The Bergen County Clerk’s Office — civil filings, judgment search, recording
Cross-courthouse moves between these offices are routine on a single appearance day. Allow extra time if the matter requires Surrogate qualification + Superior Court motion practice on the same visit.
What to expect after a hearing
Most NJ courts issue an order on the bench at hearing’s end; the written order follows by mail or email within several business days. The order’s effective date is typically the bench-ruling date unless the order specifies otherwise. Appeals run to the next level (Superior Court Law Division for municipal appeals; Appellate Division for Superior Court rulings) on the calendar set by Court Rule.
Settlement / plea agreements at this courthouse usually require:
- Written agreement (or stipulation read into the record)
- Court approval (and, in plea cases, a colloquy on voluntariness)
- Entry of order or judgment within 30 days
- Compliance window (payment, record reporting, license forwarding) — typically 30-60 days post-entry
Recurring procedural questions
Pre-trial motions
Suppression motions in DWI under R. 7:2-2 and State v. Chun apply to breath-testing-result challenges. Motion practice occurs at the municipal level for traffic and DP/PDP cases, at the county Superior Court level for indictables.
Discovery
In municipal-court cases, discovery follows R. 7:7-7: the State turns over the complaint, the discovery package, breath-test logs, and dash/body cam footage. The defense has 10 days from the initial appearance to demand a discovery package; some courts now do this automatically through their portal.
Plea negotiations
Plea offers in DWI cases are constrained by N.J.S.A. 39:4-50 — the statute prohibits plea-bargaining away first-offense DWI to a lesser non-DWI charge. The “no plea-bargaining” rule does NOT apply to refusal under N.J.S.A. 39:4-50.4a — refusal can in some circumstances be negotiated to a Title 39 traffic offense.
Trial scheduling
Trials in municipal court are scheduled by the court calendar; cases that proceed past the discovery and motion phases without resolution typically run to trial within 60–120 days under R. 7:8-5 speedy-trial standards.
Related practice resources
- Bergen County Lawyer
- DWI Practice
- Criminal Defense Practice
- Traffic Practice
- Personal Injury Practice
- About Avery & Avery
- Robert W. Avery, Esq.
- John S. Avery, Esq.
Schedule a Free Consultation
Call (201) 943-2445 or submit through the form.
From the Firm
559 Bergen Boulevard, 2nd Floor · Ridgefield, NJ Bergen County Justice Center, 10 Main Street, Hackensack, NJ 07601
Approximately 8 mi by road.