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Small Claims Judgment Collection May 2026

You Won in Small Claims Court. Now How Do You Actually Get Paid?

The judge ruled in your favor. The other person nodded and walked out. Three weeks later — nothing. Here's what the court didn't tell you about step two.

LegalCostCalculator Editorial Team Data sourced from official government websites  ·  Last reviewed:
From Reddit · r/legaladvice · 847 comments

"Won small claims 2 months ago. Judge awarded me $1,200. The defendant hasn't paid and is completely ignoring me. What do I actually do next? I thought winning was the hard part."

One of r/legaladvice's most-commented small claims threads — asked in some variation hundreds of times a year. The frustration is universal: nobody tells you that a judgment and a check are two very different things.

View discussions on Reddit

Not legal advice. This article is for informational purposes only. Cost figures are drawn from official state court fee schedules. Legal rules cited below link to official state legislature and court websites (.gov). Consult a licensed attorney in your state for advice on your specific situation.

State-by-State Guides

Get Paid — Step-by-Step Collection Instructions for Your State

Our judgment collection guides cover wage garnishment, bank levies, and property liens — with the exact forms, fees, and deadlines for all 50 states.

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Before You File

Send a Demand Letter Before Enforcement — Many Pay Immediately

A formal demand referencing your judgment number and threatening a Writ of Execution is often all it takes. Document it in writing before escalating to the sheriff.

Generate a Demand Letter →
Free Resource

Can't afford enforcement fees? You may qualify for a fee waiver.

Most states waive Writ of Execution filing fees for low-income filers. See if you qualify.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long do I have to collect a small claims judgment?
Most states give you 5–10 years to collect, and many let you renew the judgment before it expires. California allows 10 years with renewal (CCP § 683.020); Texas allows 10 years (CPRC § 34.001). Check your state's civil procedure statutes for the exact window — the clock starts from the date judgment was entered, not when the hearing was held.
What if the person who owes me has no job or bank account?
A defendant who truly has no income, no bank accounts, and no property is called "judgment-proof." Your judgment is still valid — it just can't be enforced right now. Keep the judgment active by renewing it. If their situation changes (they get a job, inherit money, buy property), you can enforce it then. Most states allow 5–10 years with renewal options.
Can I garnish wages after winning small claims court?
Yes — if you know where the defendant works, you can file for a wage garnishment order after winning. The court issues a Writ of Execution, which you serve on their employer. Federal law caps garnishment at 25% of disposable income (or the amount above 30× federal minimum wage, whichever is less) under 15 U.S.C. § 1673. Some states set lower limits.
How do I find the defendant's bank account or employer?
You can use several legal methods: send a post-judgment interrogatory (a court-ordered questionnaire requiring them to disclose assets), subpoena their bank records, or search public records like property ownership databases. Some states allow a debtor's exam — a court hearing where the defendant must answer questions about their finances under oath.
What does it cost to enforce a judgment?
Enforcing a judgment has its own costs: filing a Writ of Execution ($15–$50 in most states), sheriff or levying officer fees ($30–$100), and process server fees to serve the writ. These costs are typically added to the amount owed, so the defendant pays them if you collect successfully.

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