New Mexico ยท Magistrate Court (Metropolitan Court in Bernalillo County)

How to file a small-claims case in New Mexico

You can sue for up to $10,000 in New Mexico. Here is where to file, what the deadlines are, and how to keep your case organized.

Good to know: New Mexico has no court named small claims court. Civil money claims up to $10,000 go to the Magistrate Court (in 32 of 33 counties) or, in Bernalillo County, the Metropolitan Court. Both use the same statewide civil forms (Civil Complaint 4-201 for magistrate, 4-202 for Metro).

Filing your Civil Complaint (Form 4-201) in New Mexico

  1. Complete the Civil Complaint. Fill out the Civil Complaint (Form 4-201 magistrate, 4-202 Metro) stating proper venue, the amount claimed (up to $10,000), and a brief description of the event. Forms are free at nmcourts.gov.
  2. File with the clerk and pay the fee. File with the magistrate or metropolitan court clerk for the county where the defendant is or the claim arose, and pay the $72 docket fee (NMSA 35-6-1; Metro adds a $5 mediation fee). A fee waiver is available for indigency.
  3. Have the summons issued and served. Get a Civil Summons (Form 4-204) from the clerk. The summons, complaint, and answer form are served on the defendant by a sheriff or any uninvolved adult over 18. File the return of service.
  4. Wait for the defendant's response. The defendant has 20 days after service to file an answer. If none is filed, you may ask for a default judgment.
  5. Attend the trial. If the defendant answers, the court sets a trial. Bring your evidence, documents, and witnesses.

Filing fees: The civil docket fee is set by statute at $72 (NMSA 1978, 35-6-1), the same in magistrate and metropolitan courts and not county-set. The Metro Court adds a $5 small-claims mediation fee. A fee waiver is available on a showing of indigency.

Key New Mexico deadlines

Case typeDeadline to file
Written contract (NMSA 1978, Section 37-1-3)6 years
Oral contract / debt (unwritten contract or account) (NMSA 1978, Section 37-1-4)4 years
Property damage (NMSA 1978, Section 37-1-4)4 years
Personal injury (NMSA 1978, Section 37-1-8)3 years

Answering a lawsuit: 20 days after the summons is served.

Serving the defendant: The Civil Summons, complaint, and answer form are served by a sheriff or any non-party adult over 18, by personal delivery, by leaving them with someone over 15 at the defendant's home, or by posting plus mailing. A signed return of service is then filed.

Appeals: Either party may appeal to the district court within 15 days of the judgment being filed. The appeal is a trial de novo; the district court filing fee is $132.

New Mexico small-claims forms

Official New Mexico 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: New Mexico Courts: Civil Forms and Files. Last reviewed 2026-06-24.