District of Columbia · Small Claims and Conciliation Branch, Civil Division, Superior Court of the District of Columbia

How to file a small-claims case in District of Columbia

You can sue for up to $10,000 in District of Columbia. Here is where to file, what the deadlines are, and how to keep your case organized.

Good to know: Cases are filed in the Small Claims and Conciliation Branch of the Superior Court's Civil Division. DC is a single district with no county courts; all claims go to the Small Claims Clerk's Office. A business that files a small claims case must be represented by a lawyer.

Filing your Statement of Claim in District of Columbia

  1. Prepare the Statement of Claim and Information Sheet. Complete a Statement of Claim naming the parties and explaining why the defendant owes you money (relief in money only, up to $10,000), with copies of supporting documents, plus a case Information Sheet.
  2. Sign and verify or notarize the claim. If you do not have a lawyer, sign the claim yourself by hand. It should be notarized; if not, bring photo ID to the Small Claims Clerk's Office to have a clerk verify it. Provide a copy for each defendant.
  3. File with the Small Claims Clerk's Office and pay the fee. File by mail, in person at the Small Claims Branch (510 4th St. NW, Room 120), or electronically via eFileDC, and pay the fee at filing.
  4. Arrange service on the defendant. On the Information Sheet, choose certified mail by clerk, registered mail by clerk, or a special process server. Most claims must be served within 60 days of filing (180 days for collection and subrogation), before the court date.
  5. Attend the hearing. Appear on your court date and tell the judge why the defendant owes you. The branch is informal: usually no written answer is required. Either side may request a jury trial in writing before the first court date ($75 fee).

Filing fees: Fees are set by the court and tiered by amount: $5 up to $500, $10 over $500 up to $2,500, and $45 over $2,500 up to $10,000. Service is extra (certified mail $6.75; restricted delivery $11.90). A Fee Waiver Application is available.

Key District of Columbia deadlines

Case typeDeadline to file
Written contract (D.C. Code § 12-301(a)(7))3 years
Oral contract / debt (D.C. Code § 12-301(a)(7))3 years
Property damage (D.C. Code § 12-301(a)(3))3 years
Personal injury (D.C. Code § 12-301(a)(8))3 years

Answering a lawsuit: No written answer is required in most cases; the defendant can simply tell the judge why they disagree at the hearing. A written verified answer is required only if the defendant wants a jury trial, filed on or before the first court date.

Serving the defendant: Each defendant gets a copy of the Statement of Claim and documents by certified mail by clerk, registered mail by clerk, or a special process server (chosen on the Information Sheet). Most claims must be served within 60 days of filing (180 days for collection and subrogation), before the court date, or the case may be dismissed.

Appeals: Small Claims appeals are by Application for Allowance of Appeal ($10 fee), which is discretionary, not automatic, and must be filed within 3 days of judgment. If a Magistrate Judge signed the order, you first have 10 days to file a Motion for Review by an Associate Judge. Some DC materials cite a 14-day review window, so confirm the current deadline with the Clerk's Office.

District of Columbia small-claims forms

Official District of Columbia forms, free from the court.

This page is general information, not legal advice, and CaseBySelf is not a law firm. Rules, fees, and deadlines change and vary by court: verify with the specific court where you file. Source: DC Courts: Small Claims (Superior Court, Civil Division). Last reviewed 2026-06-24.