Massachusetts · Debt collection defense
Debt collection defense in Massachusetts small claims
Being sued over an alleged debt? Organize your defense.
If a creditor, debt buyer, or collector has sued you in small claims over an alleged debt, you can respond and defend yourself. Common defenses include the debt being past the statute of limitations, the amount being wrong, the plaintiff not proving they own the debt, or the debt not being yours at all. You do not have to face it disorganized.
In Massachusetts, small-claims cases are heard in the District Court, Boston Municipal Court, or Housing Court (small claims) and you can sue for up to $7,000.
Debt collection defense: steps that matter
- Read the lawsuit carefully and note your deadline to answer — missing it can cause a default judgment against you.
- Ask the plaintiff (in writing, through the court process) to prove the debt: the original signed agreement, a full account history, and a clear chain showing they own the debt.
- Check the age of the debt against the statute of limitations below; a time-barred debt is a defense you can raise.
- Gather your own records — payments, disputes, and any prior correspondence — and keep them together with the court dates.
Filing your Statement of Small Claim and Notice of Trial (also called the Statement of Claim and Notice form) in Massachusetts
- Identify the correct court and parties. Determine where to file: in the District Court or BMC where at least one plaintiff or defendant lives, works, or has a place of business, or where the rental property is located; or the Housing Court if it is a landlord-tenant matter. Gather the precise legal name and correct address of each party (per the mass.gov how-to page).
- Complete the Statement of Small Claim and Notice form. Fill out the Statement of Small Claim and Notice of Trial. The easiest method is the official online 'Small Claims Guide and File' guided interview, which generates the filled-in forms; you can then eFile or print them. The plaintiff is the party filing; the defendant is the party being sued.
- File the claim and pay the entry fee. File online (eFile), in person, or by mail with the Clerk-Magistrate's office of the proper court. mass.gov notes: 'when the papers are sent by mail to the clerk, the action is not commenced until the papers are actually received.' Pay the entry fee, which varies by claim amount (plus a $7 fee if you eFile).
- Receive docket number and trial date. The Clerk gives you a copy of your completed Statement of Claim and Notice showing the date and time of trial, plus a Docket Number, and the Clerk sends a copy of the Statement of Claim and Notice to the defendant.
- Prepare for and attend the hearing. About a week before trial, confirm with the Clerk that the defendant received the notice and whether an answer was filed; assemble evidence (contracts, receipts, photos, witnesses). Attend the scheduled hearing before the clerk-magistrate.
Filing fees: Filing and service fees are set locally and vary; confirm the current amount with the court. A fee waiver is available if you cannot afford the costs.
Deadline that applies to your debt collection defense
A debt claim usually rests on a contract or account, so the statute of limitations for that kind of debt is the deadline the other side has to sue you. If the debt is older than this window, the limitations period can be a defense you raise.
Oral contract or debt: 6 years (M.G.L. c. 260, § 2)
Answering a lawsuit: Massachusetts does not require the defendant to file a written answer before the hearing; the defendant may simply appear at the scheduled trial. An answer is optional, and an optional Counterclaim must be filed with the Clerk at least two days prior to the hearing.
Serving the defendant: The court (Clerk-Magistrate's office) serves the defendant: after the plaintiff files, the Clerk sends a copy of the Statement of Claim and Notice to the defendant. The defendant must actually be notified by the Post Office; if the Post Office cannot serve the defendant, no judgment can be entered. About a week before the hearing the plaintiff should call the Clerk to confirm the defendant received the notice.
Appeals: The defendant has the right to appeal within ten days after receipt of the magistrate's finding by filing, in the court where the case was decided, a claim of trial by jury (or trial by a single justice); the appeal must be accompanied by a $25 entry fee and a $100 bond, which the court may waive for insufficient funds if the appeal is not frivolous. A plaintiff's right to appeal is very limited. Confirmed against the controlling statute M.G.L. c. 218, § 23, which is current; no superseding change was found.
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: Mass.gov - Small Claims (Trial Court self-help hub). Last reviewed 2026-06-23.