Utah · Justice Court

How to file a small-claims case in Utah

You can sue for up to $20,000 in Utah (for claims filed Jan 1, 2025 through Dec 31, 2029; includes attorney fees but excludes court costs and interest). Here is where to file, what the deadlines are, and how to keep your case organized.

Good to know: Utah small claims cases are heard in justice court (in Cache County, which has no county-wide justice court, they go to district court). It is for the recovery of money only: you cannot ask the court to order someone to act or return property. Many courts use Online Dispute Resolution (ODR), which changes the forms.

Filing your Affidavit and Summons (Small Claims) in Utah

  1. Know the limits. Confirm your case fits: money only, up to $20,000 (including attorney fees but not court costs or interest). You cannot ask the court to order the other side to act or return property.
  2. Decide where to file. File in the justice court where the defendant lives or where the obligation was incurred, and check whether that court uses Online Dispute Resolution (ODR), which changes the forms.
  3. Fill out forms and file. Complete the Affidavit and Summons (non-ODR) or the ODR Affidavit and Summons (3001SC), file with the justice court, and pay the fee (or request a waiver).
  4. Serve the defendant. Have the defendant served under Utah Rule of Civil Procedure 4: at least 30 days before trial in a non-ODR case, or within 120 days of filing in an ODR case.
  5. File proof of service. File proof of service with the court so the case can proceed to trial (non-ODR) or the ODR process.

Filing fees: Fees are set statewide by statute (Utah Code Title 78A) and tiered by claim amount: $60 up to $2,000, $100 for more than $2,000 up to $7,500, and $185 from $7,500 up to $20,000. A fee waiver is available.

Key Utah deadlines

Case typeDeadline to file
Written contract (instrument in writing) (Utah Code § 78B-2-309)6 years
Oral contract / open account (debt) (Utah Code § 78B-2-307)4 years
Property damage / injury to property (Utah Code § 78B-2-305)3 years
Personal injury (Utah Code § 78B-2-307(4))4 years

Answering a lawsuit: No separate written answer is required in a non-ODR case; the defendant is summoned to the trial date in the Affidavit and Summons. In an ODR court, the defendant has 14 days after service to log in to the ODR system.

Serving the defendant: Have the papers served under Utah Rule of Civil Procedure 4: at least 30 days before trial in a non-ODR case, or within 120 days of filing in an ODR case. Then file proof of service with the court.

Appeals: File a Notice of Appeal with the justice court within 28 days of judgment. The appeal goes to the district court for a trial de novo (Utah Rule of Small Claims Procedure 12).

Utah small-claims forms

Official Utah 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: Utah State Courts: Small Claims (self-help). Last reviewed 2026-06-24.