North Dakota · Small Claims Court (a division of the District Court)

How to file a small-claims case in North Dakota

You can sue for up to $15,000 in North Dakota. Here is where to file, what the deadlines are, and how to keep your case organized.

Good to know: North Dakota's Small Claims Court is "a division of district court," not a separately named court, and it is a less formal process than a regular district court civil case. A key nuance: there is no right to a jury trial and no right to appeal a small claims decision; the only escape route is that the DEFENDANT may remove the entire case to district court (where it becomes an ordinary civil action) within the 20-day response window. On statutes of limitation, North Dakota is unusual: ordinary personal injury (negligence/bodily injury) falls under the SIX-year catch-all of § 28-01-16(5) ("any other injury to the person... not arising upon contract"), NOT the two-year period. The two-year limit in § 28-01-18 applies only to specific torts such as libel, slander, assault, battery, false imprisonment, and malpractice. North Dakota's contract statute does not distinguish oral from written contracts: both are "express or implied" contracts under § 28-01-16(1) and carry the same 6-year period. Note that small claims also has its own threshold separate from the limitations statute: a claim may only be brought if "no more than six years has passed since the date of the debt or date of the last payment."

Filing your Claim Affidavit (Form 2) in North Dakota

  1. Complete the required forms. The Plaintiff completes the Claim Affidavit (Form 2) and the Affidavit of Identification (Form 8), and gathers copies of documents (exhibits) the Plaintiff believes prove the claim.
  2. File with the clerk of court. File the completed forms and copies of the exhibits with the clerk of court, and pay the filing fee (currently $20 for filing a claim affidavit).
  3. Serve the Defendant. The Plaintiff arranges for service of a copy of the completed Claim Affidavit and five (5) other forms from the Small Claims Court packet on the Defendant.
  4. File proof of service. The Plaintiff files the completed Affidavit of Mailing/Personal Service (Form 6) with the clerk of court.
  5. Await the Defendant's response. The Defendant has 20 days to request a hearing or remove the case to district court (Form 3); if the Defendant does nothing, the judge or judicial referee may grant a default judgment on the filed documents.

Filing fees: A filing fee applies to the claim affidavit, and a separate fee applies if the defendant removes the case to district court. Confirm current amounts with the clerk.

Key North Dakota deadlines

Case typeDeadline to file
Written contract (N.D.C.C. § 28-01-16)6 years
Oral contract or debt (N.D.C.C. § 28-01-16)6 years
Property damage (N.D.C.C. § 28-01-16)6 years
Personal injury (N.D.C.C. § 28-01-16)6 years

Answering a lawsuit: 20 calendar days after being served (to request a hearing or remove to district court)

Serving the defendant: The Plaintiff arranges for service of the Claim Affidavit (and five other packet forms) on the Defendant, then files an Affidavit of Mailing/Personal Service (Form 6) with the clerk.

Appeals: No appeal. Small Claims Court decisions cannot be appealed; the decision of the judge or judicial referee is final. (A defendant may instead remove the case to district court within 20 days before a small claims decision.)

North Dakota small-claims forms

Official North Dakota forms, free from the court; CaseBySelf can pre-fill them from your case details.

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: North Dakota Court System - Small Claims Court Actions (Legal Self Help Center). Last reviewed 2026-06-23.