Iowa ยท District Court (small claims docket)

How to file a small-claims case in Iowa

You can sue for up to $6,500 in Iowa. Here is where to file, what the deadlines are, and how to keep your case organized.

Good to know: Iowa has no separate small claims court; it is a simplified docket of the district court under Iowa Code chapter 631, heard by a magistrate or judge. You file electronically through the statewide eFiling (EDMS) system in the county where the case belongs.

Filing your Original Notice and Petition for a Money Judgment (Form 3.1) in Iowa

  1. Complete the Original Notice and Petition (Form 3.1). Fill in the county, your name and address, each defendant's name and address, and the amount owed and the reason. Do not include the filing fee or court costs in the amount claimed.
  2. Complete a Verification of Account (Form 3.27). Complete a separate Form 3.27 for each defendant and attach an itemized statement showing how you reached the amount claimed. If suing on a promissory note, include the original note.
  3. Electronically file and pay the fee. File the forms through the Iowa Judicial Branch eFiling (EDMS) system; the $95 filing fee is collected at filing.
  4. Arrange service on each defendant. Choose service by the county sheriff or by certified restricted mail through the clerk ($20 per party). Out-of-state defendants may be served via the Secretary of State ($10).
  5. Attend the hearing. If the defendant disputes the claim, the clerk sets a hearing. Appear in person (or through a lawyer), with proof of service and your evidence.

Filing fees: The filing fee is $95, set statewide and collected at eFiling. Certified restricted-mail service adds $20 per party; sheriff fees vary by county; Secretary of State service adds $10.

Key Iowa deadlines

Case typeDeadline to file
Written contract (Iowa Code 614.1(5)(a))10 years
Oral / unwritten contract (debt) (Iowa Code 614.1(4))5 years
Property damage (Iowa Code 614.1(4))5 years
Personal injury (Iowa Code 614.1(2))2 years

Answering a lawsuit: 20 days after service (60 days if served via the Secretary of State).

Serving the defendant: The clerk causes service of the Original Notice and answer form. You may elect certified restricted-delivery mail (return receipt to the clerk) or personal service by a sheriff or peace officer; proper notice is shown by the signed receipt or a return of service (Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.308).

Appeals: Any party may appeal within 20 days of judgment, by oral notice at the end of the hearing or a written Notice of Appeal (Form 3.26) plus the district court docket fee (Iowa Code 631.13). The appeal is heard on the record by a different judge.

Iowa small-claims forms

Official Iowa 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: Iowa Judicial Branch: Small Claims. Last reviewed 2026-06-24.