Kentucky ยท Small Claims Division of the District Court

How to file a small-claims case in Kentucky

You can sue for up to $2,500 in Kentucky (exclusive of interest and costs). Here is where to file, what the deadlines are, and how to keep your case organized.

Good to know: Kentucky small claims is the Small Claims Division of the District Court, which sits in each county. There is no jury (KRS 24A.230). Cases are filed with the Circuit Court Clerk in the county.

Filing your Small Claims Complaint (AOC-175) in Kentucky

  1. Complete the Small Claims Complaint (AOC-175). Fill out the AOC-175 with the correct name and address of the person or business you are suing and an explanation of the dispute. The clerk cannot fill it out or give legal advice.
  2. File in the correct county (or e-file). File with the Circuit Court Clerk in the county where the defendant lives or does business (contract disputes have exceptions). You can also e-file at ehelp.kycourts.net.
  3. Pay the filing fee. Pay the filing fee when you file. By KRS 24A.270 it equals the District Court fee for claims of $500 or less.
  4. Clerk issues the summons and serves the defendant. The clerk issues the Small Claims Summons (AOC-180) and serves the defendant with the complaint. Tell the clerk whether you want certified mail or sheriff service.
  5. Confirm service and appear at the hearing. Check with the clerk that the defendant was served, then appear at the hearing date listed on the summons with your evidence and witnesses.

Filing fees: The filing fee is set by statute to equal the District Court fee for claims of $500 or less (KRS 24A.270); the official handbook confirms a fee is charged but does not state the dollar amount, so verify it with the clerk. Certified-mail or sheriff service costs are paid separately.

Key Kentucky deadlines

Case typeDeadline to file
Written contract (Kentucky Small Claims Handbook (P-6))15 years
Oral contract / debt (Kentucky Small Claims Handbook (P-6))5 years
Personal injury (Kentucky Small Claims Handbook (P-6))1 year

Answering a lawsuit: No written answer is required. The defendant is summoned to appear at the hearing, set 20 to 40 days after service; failing to appear can result in a default judgment.

Serving the defendant: After filing, the Circuit Court Clerk issues the summons (AOC-180) and serves the defendant with the complaint. You choose the method: certified mail (return receipt, postage prepaid to the clerk) or personal service by the Sheriff (fee paid to the Sheriff).

Appeals: Either party may appeal to Circuit Court within 10 days of the judgment being entered (KRS 24A.340), then file a Statement of Appeal within 30 days. The Circuit Court reviews only whether the law was applied correctly; no new evidence is allowed.

Kentucky small-claims forms

Official Kentucky 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: Kentucky Court of Justice: Small Claims Handbook (P-6). Last reviewed 2026-06-24.