What Is the Minimum Amount You Can Sue For in Small Claims Court?
There is no legal minimum — but filing fees of $30–$100 create a practical floor. Here's how to figure out if your claim is worth filing.
Not legal advice. This article is for informational purposes only. Cost figures are drawn from official state court fee schedules. Consult a licensed attorney in your state for advice on your specific situation.
There is no legal minimum amount to file a small claims case in any U.S. state. You could theoretically sue for $1. But that doesn't mean it makes sense — and in most cases, very small claims end up costing the plaintiff more in fees than they'd ever recover.
The real question isn't "what's the minimum I'm allowed to sue for" — it's "what's the minimum where it actually makes financial sense." Those are very different numbers.
The Legal Minimum: None
No state sets a floor on small claims court filings. Virginia, California, Texas, New York, Florida — all allow you to file a claim for any dollar amount, including amounts well below the filing fee itself. Courts accept these cases because there's no rule against it.
In practice, judges may look at very small claims with some skepticism — not because they're prohibited, but because courts are busy and a $50 dispute over a broken item may feel like a waste of judicial resources. That said, judges are required to hear your case regardless of the amount.
Some state laws allow you to sue for more than the face value of your loss. For example, Virginia allows up to triple damages on a dishonored check under Va. Code § 8.01-27.1. A $75 bad check could become a $225 claim — enough to clear the fee hurdle.
The Practical Minimum: $300–$500
The real floor is set by court costs, not court rules. Here's the math that determines whether a small claims filing is worth it:
| Cost Item | Typical Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Court filing fee | $30 – $100 | Varies by state and claim amount |
| Serving the defendant | $12 – $125 | Sheriff or process server |
| Time off work | Half to full day | Hearings 30–70 days after filing |
| Minimum out-of-pocket | $42 – $225 | Recoverable if you win |
If your claim is $150 and your court costs are $42–$75, you're spending 25–50% of your potential recovery just to get to the hearing. If you win, many states allow you to add court costs to your judgment — but that requires the defendant to actually pay, which is never guaranteed.
Most legal guides and courthouse self-help advisors suggest $300–$500 as the informal practical minimum where small claims court is clearly worth pursuing. Below that range, you may be better off writing a demand letter and accepting the outcome.
What Are the Maximum Limits by State?
While there's no minimum, every state sets a maximum — the largest amount you can claim in small claims court without going to a higher court. These limits vary widely:
| State | Small Claims Maximum | Court Name |
|---|---|---|
| Tennessee | $25,000 | General Sessions Court |
| Georgia | $15,000 | Magistrate Court |
| Delaware | $25,000 | Justice of the Peace |
| Texas | $20,000 | Justice Court |
| California | $12,500 | Small Claims Court |
| New York | $10,000 | Small Claims Court |
| Florida | $8,000 | County Court |
| Illinois | $10,000 | Small Claims Court |
| Virginia | $5,000 | General District Court |
| New Jersey | $5,000 | Special Civil Part |
| Kentucky | $2,500 | Small Claims Court |
See the full list on our Small Claims Court Limits by State page — every state, current as of 2026.
Send a demand letter first — many defendants pay within days
A written demand citing the specific amount and legal basis is often enough. Many disputes resolve before any court involvement.
When a Small Claim Is Too Small to File
Filing isn't always the right move. Here's a quick decision framework:
- ✓ Claim is $300 or more
- ✓ You have written documentation
- ✓ Defendant has income or assets
- ✓ State law allows penalty damages
- ✓ Court costs are recoverable if you win
- ✗ Claim is under $150
- ✗ Fees would eat 50%+ of recovery
- ✗ You have no written evidence
- ✗ Defendant has no traceable income
- ✗ You cannot take time off for a hearing
For claims under $200, a professional demand letter often gets results without court. If the defendant is a business, you can also file a complaint with the Better Business Bureau or your state's Attorney General consumer protection office — both create pressure without filing fees.
Can You Split a Larger Claim to Make It Fit?
No. You cannot artificially reduce a larger claim to fit within the small claims limit, and you cannot split one claim into multiple smaller filings to circumvent the maximum. This is called "claim splitting" and courts treat it as an abuse of process — if discovered, the case can be dismissed.
If your legitimate claim is above your state's small claims maximum, your options are:
- Voluntarily reduce your claim to the maximum — you waive the difference permanently, but you get the faster, cheaper process
- File in a higher civil court — more formal, often requires an attorney, but no cap on recovery
- Mediation or arbitration — faster than civil court, binding, and caps are set by the parties, not the court
Finding Your State's Exact Fees
Filing fees vary by state and by claim amount. Most states use a tiered schedule — the smaller the claim, the lower the fee. Here are the common tiers for states with $5,000 limits:
| Claim Amount | Typical Filing Fee | Example States |
|---|---|---|
| Up to $1,500 | $30 – $50 | VA ($30), NJ ($35), TX ($46) |
| $1,501 – $3,000 | $50 – $75 | VA ($50), NJ ($50), TX ($71) |
| $3,001 – $5,000 | $75 – $100 | VA ($75), NJ ($75), CA ($75) |
| $5,001 – $10,000 | $75 – $100 | CA ($75), NY ($20–$40), FL ($100) |
Use our Small Claims Filing Fees by State calculator to find the exact fee for your state and claim amount.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is there a minimum amount to sue in small claims court?
What is the smallest amount worth taking to small claims court?
Can I sue for $100 in small claims court?
What is the maximum you can sue for in small claims court?
How much does it cost to file a small claims case?
Can I sue for less than the filing fee?
Sources & References
- U.S. Courts — Small Claims (uscourts.gov) — overview of small claims court in the federal system
- USA.gov — Small Claims Court — state-by-state links to official small claims resources
- Virginia Code § 8.01-27.1 (law.lis.virginia.gov) — bad check treble damages
- State small claims limits and filing fees — compiled from official state court fee schedules. See our Small Claims Court Limits by State page for per-state citations.