West Virginia · Unpaid invoice
Unpaid invoice in West Virginia small claims
Client won't pay your invoice? Collect it in small claims.
If a client or customer has not paid an invoice for work you delivered or goods you sold, small claims court is a low-cost way to collect. You do not need a lawyer. The strength of your case usually comes down to clear proof: the agreement or terms, the invoice, evidence the work or goods were delivered, and a record of your attempts to collect.
In West Virginia, small-claims cases are heard in the Magistrate Court and you can sue for up to $20,000.
Unpaid invoice: steps that matter
- Send a final written demand (a clear statement of what is owed and a payment deadline) and keep proof you sent it.
- Gather your contract or written terms, the invoice, delivery/completion proof, and any messages showing the other side accepted the work.
- Confirm you are within the statute of limitations below before you file.
- File in the correct court for where the defendant is or where the work happened, and keep every date and document together.
Filing your Civil Complaint (Form SCA-M207) in West Virginia
- Complete the Civil Complaint (SCA-M207). Fill out the complaint completely, naming each defendant with a full name and physical address, the date the claim arose, the nature of the claim, and the relief requested.
- File with the magistrate clerk and pay costs. File with the magistrate clerk in the county where you are suing and pay the filing fee, court costs, and service fees up front. If you cannot afford them, file an affidavit of indigency.
- Choose and pay for a method of service. Pick how the defendant is notified: clerk certified mail ($20) or first-class mail ($5), sheriff service ($25 per defendant), or a private process server. You pay for the method you choose.
- Wait for the answer or seek default. The defendant generally has 20 days after service to answer (30 if served on an agent). If they do not, you may file for a default judgment 21 days after service (31 if served on an agent).
- Attend the trial. If the defendant disputes the claim, the court sets a trial; the parties may still settle. A jury trial can be requested in writing within 20 days of the answer.
Filing fees: Filing costs are statutory (W. Va. Code 50-3-1), collected in advance, and run $50 to $70 by claim amount, plus service fees (clerk certified mail $20, first-class $5, sheriff $25 per defendant). That table predates the 2025 increase of the limit to $20,000, so confirm the cost for larger claims with the clerk. A fee waiver is available via an affidavit of indigency.
Deadline that applies to your unpaid invoice
An unpaid invoice is usually a contract or account claim. If you had a signed agreement or written terms, the written-contract statute of limitations below typically applies; a purely verbal deal usually falls under the oral-contract period. That statute is the deadline to file, so do not wait too long.
Written contract: 10 years (W. Va. Code § 55-2-6)
Answering a lawsuit: 20 days after service (30 days if service is accepted by an authorized agent or attorney-in-fact); 5 days in wrongful-occupation and unlawful entry and detainer cases.
Serving the defendant: You choose and pay for service: clerk certified mail (restricted delivery) $20, clerk first-class mail $5, sheriff $25 per defendant, or a private process server. Service may also be made on a family member 16 or older at the defendant's home. If service is not completed and you take no action within 6 months, the case is dismissed without prejudice.
Appeals: Either party may appeal to the circuit court as of right within 20 days of judgment; the appeal is a trial de novo. The magistrate clerk collects a bond and the circuit court fee, and the appeal stays enforcement. Use Form SCA-M111-1P (bench trial) or SCA-M110-1P (jury verdict).
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: West Virginia Judiciary: Magistrate Court Forms. Last reviewed 2026-06-24.