Bayonne injuries often involve property types where maintenance and traffic collide: multi-family buildings, older housing stock with worn treads, and shared entrances where residents and visitors constantly move through.
Common local scenarios include:
- Apartment building stairwells where handrails are loose, steps are uneven, or lights are inconsistent.
- Shared entryways and basement stairs in older properties where carpeting or mats shift over time.
- Workplace stairs in buildings used by contractors or service businesses where “temporary” obstruction becomes permanent.
- Visitor-heavy locations where the property expects foot traffic but fails to keep stairs clear and safe.
In New Jersey, these cases turn on documentation and timing—how quickly the hazard was addressed, whether prior complaints existed, and how clearly your medical records link your injuries to the fall.


