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Small Claims Court Guide — State Limits, Filing Process, When to Hire an Attorney

Complete guide to small claims court: state-by-state dollar limits ($3,500-$25,000), filing fees, step-by-step process, and when your case is too big for small claims

Last reviewed: April 2026

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Reviewed by Leonard Goldberg, Editor · Last updated May 15, 2026

What Small Claims Court Actually Is

Small claims court is the self-help civil court for disputes under a state-specific dollar limit — ranging from $3,500 (Arizona) to $25,000 (Tennessee, Delaware). No attorneys required (some states prohibit them in small claims). No jury. Simple procedure: you file, serve the defendant, appear at a short hearing, judge decides. Designed to be accessible without legal training.

Best uses: security deposit disputes, contractor disagreements, unpaid invoices, damaged personal property, minor car accident repairs, landlord/tenant issues, failure to refund. Poor uses: personal injury with medical bills, complex contract breaches, cases involving IP or trademark, anything requiring expert testimony or discovery.

Filing fees: $15-$160 depending on state and claim amount. Most fees are waivable if you qualify financially. Processing time: typically 4-12 weeks from filing to hearing. Collection after winning: often harder than winning — courts don't collect for you. Enforcement via wage garnishment, bank levy, or property liens, which each have their own procedures.

State Small Claims Limits & Filing Fees (2026)

Dollar limits and fees change. Verify current figures with your local court. If your claim exceeds the limit, you can still file in small claims — but you <strong>waive</strong> the portion above the limit. For larger cases, regular civil court (district or superior court) is the correct venue, typically requiring an attorney.

StateMax ClaimFiling Fee
Tennessee$25,000$55–$160
Delaware$25,000$45–$90
Georgia$15,000$50–$75
Alaska$10,000$30–$100
California$12,500$30–$75
Texas$20,000$54–$90
Florida$8,000$55–$80
New York$10,000$15–$20
Illinois$10,000$62–$134
Ohio$6,000$35–$75
Pennsylvania$12,000$50–$100
Michigan$7,000$30–$65
Arizona$3,500$25–$55
Massachusetts$7,000$40–$55
Washington$10,000$35–$50

Limits and fees change. Verify with your local court before filing.

When Small Claims Is the Right Move

Use small claims when: (1) the dollar amount fits under your state's limit, (2) facts are simple — no expert witnesses needed, (3) you have clear documentation (contract, receipts, photos, text messages), (4) the defendant has recoverable assets (judgment-proof defendants mean you won't collect even if you win), (5) no parallel criminal case affects the civil dispute.

Common Small Claims Case Types

  • Security deposit refund: Landlord kept deposit beyond allowable deductions. States with double/treble damages for bad-faith retention (CA, MA): strong claim.
  • Contractor dispute / unfinished work: Paid deposit, work abandoned or defective. Photo evidence + written contract essential. Many contractor disputes fit under small claims limits.
  • Unpaid loan to friend/family: Documented loan (text messages, Venmo transactions, signed note) that wasn't repaid. Judgment easier than collection.
  • Property damage / auto repair under limit: Minor fender benders, damaged fence, etc. Get detailed repair estimate from credible contractor.
  • Failure to refund: Merchant refused refund for defective product or canceled service. Consumer protection laws may add leverage.
  • Pet injury / vet negligence: Vet malpractice, groomer injury, boarding facility negligence. Most states treat pets as property — limited to market value unless extraordinary circumstances.

Step-by-Step Filing Process

  1. 1

    Calculate your damages precisely

    Add up exact amounts — receipts, invoices, repair estimates. Round to the cent. Ask for what you actually lost, plus allowable court fees. Don't inflate — judges dismiss inflated claims.

  2. 2

    Send a demand letter first

    Most states require or strongly encourage a written demand letter 30 days before filing. Summarize what happened, amount owed, deadline. Certified mail with return receipt. Save copy + proof of delivery.

  3. 3

    File at the correct court

    File in the defendant's county of residence OR where the dispute occurred. Wrong venue = dismissal. Small claims courts are typically divisions of district/county court.

  4. 4

    Serve the defendant

    Sheriff, process server, or certified mail (varies by state). You CANNOT serve the defendant yourself. Proof of service filed with court. If you can't locate defendant, alternative service (publication) may be available.

  5. 5

    Prepare evidence

    Bring: contract/agreement, receipts, photos, correspondence, witnesses (up to 3 typically), bank statements. Organize chronologically. Print everything — don't rely on phone screens.

  6. 6

    Attend the hearing

    Brief (15-30 minutes typical). Tell your story clearly. Present documents. Answer judge's questions. Don't argue with defendant — address only the judge. Written decision within days-weeks.

When You Should NOT Use Small Claims

Skip small claims and consult an attorney if: (1) damages exceed your state's limit by more than 20% — don't waive that much, (2) personal injury with ongoing medical treatment — medical bills keep growing, insurance negotiation needed, (3) complex contract or business disputes — discovery, depositions, expert testimony needed, (4) insurance company is defendant — they have attorneys, you need one, (5) bad faith insurance claim — opens attorney fees + punitive damages, way beyond small claims scope. For personal injury, use our Car Accident Calculator to see if your case is small-claims or attorney-size.

Small Claims Court FAQs

Can I sue in small claims for more than my state's limit?

You can file, but you waive anything above the limit. Example: Arizona limit is $3,500. If your actual damages are $5,000, filing small claims means you collect at most $3,500 + fees — the other $1,500 is gone. For claims 20%+ over the limit, use regular civil court and get an attorney.

Can I have an attorney represent me in small claims?

Depends on state. California, Michigan, Nebraska prohibit attorneys in small claims for both sides. Most other states allow attorneys but don't require them. If the defendant is a corporation, most states require their representative be an attorney or authorized non-lawyer. Prepare as if you're solo — attorneys add cost that often exceeds the recovery.

How long does small claims take?

4-12 weeks from filing to hearing. Varies by court backlog. Some counties have fast tracks (6-8 weeks); others (LA, NYC) take 3-4 months. Appeals can extend to 6-12 months. Simple cases are often resolved via settlement before hearing — many judges actively encourage this.

I won! How do I actually collect?

Hardest part. Judgment gives you the right to collect, not the money itself. Options: (1) demand letter with copy of judgment, (2) wage garnishment (if defendant employed), (3) bank levy (if you know their bank), (4) property lien (judgment records filed with county recorder — attaches to real estate), (5) debtor's exam (defendant must disclose assets under oath). Some defendants are judgment-proof (no assets, no income) — you may collect nothing despite winning.

Can small claims judgments be appealed?

Yes, in most states. Appeal is 'de novo' — new trial, often in higher court. Must file within 10-30 days of judgment depending on state. Appeals are uncommon — cost of litigation often exceeds small claims amounts. If defendant appeals, you may need to hire an attorney for the higher court.

What if the defendant doesn't show up?

Default judgment in your favor, usually. Judge will review your evidence quickly to confirm prima facie case. You still have to collect, but you won on the merits. If defendant later claims they weren't properly served, they can move to vacate default — which is why proper service is critical.

Can I file in small claims if I'm not a US citizen?

Yes. US civil courts don't require citizenship for plaintiffs. You need to be able to serve the defendant and appear at the hearing (in person or sometimes video). Undocumented plaintiffs are not required to disclose immigration status — it's not relevant to most civil claims. Defendants cannot threaten ICE reporting to coerce dismissal (illegal in CA, CO, WA, others).

How much does it cost to sue in small claims?

$15-$160 filing fee + $30-$100 service fee (sheriff or process server) = typically $50-$250 total. Waivable if you qualify financially (complete fee waiver form at clerk). Winning party usually gets these costs back from the loser. Attorney consultation: $0-$100 (many offer free small claims consultations).

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