South Dakota · Small Claims Court (within the Circuit Court system)

How to file a small-claims case in South Dakota

You can sue for up to $12,000 in South Dakota (verify the current limit with the clerk of courts). Here is where to file, what the deadlines are, and how to keep your case organized.

Good to know: South Dakota does not have a separate small claims "court" as a distinct tribunal; small claims actions (SDCL ch. 15-39) are filed with the county Clerk of Courts and are part of the circuit court system. If the defendant contests the claim, the trial is held before a circuit court or magistrate judge. South Dakota notably does NOT distinguish between written and oral contracts for the limitations period: both fall under SDCL 15-2-13(1) at six years. Property damage (injury to goods/chattels) is also six years under SDCL 15-2-13(4), while personal injury is the shorter three years under SDCL 15-2-14(3).

Filing your statement of claim (Form UJS-008) in South Dakota

  1. Determine the correct county and confirm the limit. File either in the county where the defendant lives or in the county where the loss occurred. Because the $12,000 limit could change, the Guide advises verifying the maximum amount with the clerk of courts office. Parties must be at least 18 years old.
  2. Complete the required forms. The plaintiff (or their attorney) must submit a case filing statement (form UJS-232) and a signed, written statement of claim (form UJS-008) describing how the loss or damage occurred. UJS also offers a Guide and File system that generates completed forms.
  3. File with the clerk of courts and pay the fee. File the two statements, any supporting documents (receipts, cost estimates, etc.), and the addresses of the plaintiff and defendant with the clerk of courts. Fees and court costs must be paid by the plaintiff at the time of filing.
  4. Case is docketed and an answer/hearing date is set. After the clerk accepts the statement of damages claimed and required fees, the case is entered on the small claims docket and the clerk assigns the date the defendant must answer by, or the date and time of a hearing.
  5. Defendant is served notice. The clerk of courts sends the defendant notice of the lawsuit by certified mail. If the defendant does not receive notice by certified mail, the sheriff may need to personally serve the notice (at additional cost, with the plaintiff's authorization).

Filing fees: Filing fees and court costs are paid by the plaintiff at filing. Confirm current amounts with the clerk of courts.

Key South Dakota deadlines

Case typeDeadline to file
Written contract (SDCL § 15-2-13)6 years
Oral contract or debt (SDCL § 15-2-13)6 years
Property damage (SDCL § 15-2-13)6 years
Personal injury (SDCL § 15-2-14)3 years

Answering a lawsuit: Not a fixed number of days. The defendant must file an answer (form UJS-278) with the clerk of courts office within the time limit specified in the notice (the clerk assigns the date the defendant must answer by when the case is docketed).

Serving the defendant: The clerk of courts sends notice to the defendant by certified mail; if the defendant does not receive it by certified mail, the sheriff may need to personally serve the notice (additional fee, plaintiff authorization required).

Appeals: There is no appeal. A small claims judgment cannot be appealed to a higher court. (A defendant who wants a fuller proceeding may instead seek to have the action transferred from small claims court to circuit court under SDCL 15-39-57.)

South Dakota small-claims forms

Official South 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: South Dakota Unified Judicial System: Small Claims Court Information (Self-Help). Last reviewed 2026-06-23.