Maryland · Small Claims division of the District Court of Maryland
How to file a small-claims case in Maryland
You can sue for up to $5,000 in Maryland (money only; claims from $5,001 to $30,000 are heard as regular District Court civil cases). Here is where to file, what the deadlines are, and how to keep your case organized.
Good to know: Small claims are not a separate court; they are handled as a simplified, less formal track within the statewide District Court of Maryland. A case qualifies as a small claim only if it is for $5,000 or less, for money only (not return of property or performance of a service), and does not involve discovery. The District Court itself can hear civil claims up to $30,000; claims over $5,000 (up to $30,000) are tried as regular civil cases, not small claims.
Filing your Civil Complaint (Form DC-CV-001) in Maryland
- File the Complaint (DC-CV-001). Complete the District Court Civil Complaint form (DC-CV-001), naming the correct defendant, and file it with the clerk at any District Court location. Forms are available at the clerk's office.
- Pay the filing fee. Pay the filing fee at the time of filing. Fee amounts are set by the District Court's Civil Cost Schedule (DCA-109); check the current schedule when you pick up your forms. If you cannot afford the fee, file a Request for Waiver of Prepaid Costs (CC-DC-089).
- Choose a method of service and the court issues the Writ of Summons. On the Complaint, select how the defendant will be served (certified mail, sheriff, or private process). The court then issues a Writ of Summons to officially notify the defendant that a suit has been filed.
- Have the defendant served. Serve the defendant by one of the three methods. You may not serve the defendant yourself; service must be by certified mail (clerk mails it), the sheriff, or an uninvolved adult 18 or older / private process server.
- Submit Proof of Service. File proof that the defendant was served: the green certified-mail return receipt, or an affidavit of service (Proof of Service form DC-CV-002 / Affidavit of Service) for sheriff or private process. Trial is normally set within 60 days of when the complaint was filed.
Filing fees: Filing fees are set by the District Court Civil Cost Schedule (DCA-109); confirm the current amount with the clerk. A fee waiver (CC-DC-089) is available.
Key Maryland deadlines
| Case type | Deadline to file |
|---|---|
| Written contract (Md. Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 5-101) | 3 years |
| Oral contract or debt (Md. Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 5-101) | 3 years |
| Property damage (Md. Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 5-101) | 3 years |
| Personal injury (Md. Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 5-101) | 3 years |
Answering a lawsuit: 15 days from the date the defendant receives the summons to file a Notice of Intention to Defend (60 days for out-of-state defendants and those with resident agents)
Serving the defendant: The plaintiff may not serve the defendant personally. There are three methods, selected by checking a box on the Complaint: (1) certified mail (the clerk creates the summons and mails it; the green return receipt is proof of service); (2) sheriff (hand delivery, returns an affidavit of service); or (3) private process (an uninvolved adult 18 or older, or a private company, hand-delivers the summons and files an affidavit of service).
Appeals: Either party may appeal to the Circuit Court by filing a Notice of Appeal (form DC-CV-037) in the District Court within 30 days after entry of judgment. A small claims appeal ($5,000 or less) is heard de novo, meaning a completely new trial in the Circuit Court (total appeal fee $175).
Maryland small-claims forms
Official Maryland forms, free from the court; CaseBySelf can pre-fill them from your case details.
- Complaint/Application and Affidavit in Support of Judgment: Starts a Maryland District Court small-claims case and supports affidavit/default judgment where applicable.
- Small Claims Brochure: Maryland Courts brochure explaining how to file a small claim in District Court.
- Request for Waiver of Costs: Requests waiver of Maryland court costs when a party cannot afford to prepay them.
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: Maryland Courts - Small Claims (District Court legal help). Last reviewed 2026-06-23.