Hawaii · Small Claims Division of the District Court

How to file a small-claims case in Hawaii

You can sue for up to $5,000 in Hawaii (no monetary limit for a tenant's residential security-deposit claim). Here is where to file, what the deadlines are, and how to keep your case organized.

Good to know: Small claims in Hawaii is handled by the Small Claims Division of the District Court (sometimes called Small Claims Court). It is governed by HRS Chapter 633 and the Rules of the Small Claims Division of the District Courts. Note a source discrepancy: the current Hawaii State Judiciary self-help web page states the monetary limit is $5,000 (and counterclaims up to $40,000), while the older official printed brochure (smclaim.pdf) still states $3,500 (counterclaim $20,000). The $5,000 figure on the live judiciary website is treated as current. There is no separate statute-of-limitations period for oral vs. written contracts in Hawaii: HRS 657-1 applies a single 6-year period to all contract/debt actions.

Filing your Statement of Claim in Hawaii

  1. Prepare and file a Statement of Claim. File a Statement of Claim with the clerk of the District Court (Small Claims Division) in the proper division (generally where the defendant resides, where the claim arose, or, for security-deposit disputes, where the property is located). Upon request the clerk may help individuals prepare the Statement of Claim, but cannot give legal advice; businesses/corporations must prepare it without clerk assistance. On Oahu, all small claims documents are filed at the District Court of the First Circuit, Civil Division, Kauikeaouli Hale, 1111 Alakea Street, 3rd Floor, Honolulu.
  2. Pay the filing fee. Pay the filing fee when filing (a judge may waive it for financial hardship). The civil division payment window closes before the end of business, so file during office hours (Monday-Friday, 7:45 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.; payment window closes at 4:15 p.m.).
  3. Receive the trial date / Notice. When the Statement of Claim is filed, the clerk assigns a specific date and time for the trial and sets it on the Notice in the Statement of Claim. The clerk sets a trial date not less than 5 nor more than 30 days from the date of filing.
  4. Serve the defendant. The plaintiff is responsible for notifying the defendant by serving a copy of the Statement of Claim and Notice. Permitted methods include registered/certified mail (restricted delivery, return receipt requested), service by the sheriff (Dept. of Public Safety), service by any non-party over age 18, or personal service by the plaintiff with the defendant's signed acknowledgment or an accompanying witness. The defendant must be served at least 48 hours before the trial date.
  5. Attend mediation and trial. All small claims cases go through mediation first (with a mediator from the Mediation Center of the Pacific). If no agreement is reached, the parties return to court for trial before the judge that same day; bring all relevant documents and any witnesses.

Filing fees: A filing fee applies and may be waived by a judge for financial hardship. Verify the current amount with the court.

Key Hawaii deadlines

Case typeDeadline to file
Written contract (HRS § 657-1)6 years
Oral contract or debt (HRS § 657-1)6 years
Property damage (HRS § 657-7)2 years
Personal injury (HRS § 657-7)2 years

Answering a lawsuit: No written answer is required. The defendant may verbally admit or deny the claim at the trial date. The defendant must be served at least 48 hours before the trial date.

Serving the defendant: The plaintiff serves the Statement of Claim and Notice on the defendant by registered/certified mail (restricted delivery, return receipt requested), by the sheriff, by any non-party over age 18, or by the plaintiff personally with the defendant's signed acknowledgment or a witness; service must reach the defendant at least 48 hours before the trial date.

Appeals: There is no right to appeal a small claims judgment; the judge's decision is final.

Hawaii small-claims forms

Official Hawaii forms, free from the court; CaseBySelf can pre-fill them from your case details.

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: Hawaii State Judiciary - Small Claims (overview). Last reviewed 2026-06-23.