Statute of Limitations for Small Claims Court — By State
Small claims court has the same filing deadlines as any civil court. Miss your state's deadline and you permanently lose the right to sue — even if you'd win on the merits.
"My landlord owes me $1,200 from a security deposit dispute 2.5 years ago. Did I wait too long to file in small claims?"
One of the most common questions in r/legaladvice and Quora's Legal section — asked thousands of times. The answer depends entirely on the state and claim type, and many people get it wrong.
Not legal advice. Statutes of limitations are technical legal deadlines that vary by state, claim type, and circumstance. Consult a licensed attorney in your state if you're unsure whether your claim is time-barred.
The Statute of Limitations: What It Is and Why It Matters
A statute of limitations is a law that sets a deadline for filing a lawsuit. After the deadline passes, the defendant can raise it as a complete defense — and the court will dismiss your case regardless of whether you're right.
Small claims court is not exempt from these deadlines. The same statutes that apply in superior court apply when you file in small claims. Filing in small claims does not give you extra time, and filing after the deadline does not reset the clock.
Many people believe small claims has its own shorter or longer deadlines — it doesn't. The SOL for a contract claim in California is 4 years in small claims and 4 years in superior court. Same law, same deadline.
Deadlines by Claim Type
The applicable deadline depends on the legal basis of your claim — not the dollar amount or which court you're filing in.
Examples: Signed lease, contractor agreement, loan agreement with a promissory note
The written nature of the contract typically extends the deadline vs. oral agreements.
Examples: Handshake loan, verbal agreement to do work or pay for something
Harder to prove and shorter deadline in most states.
Examples: Car accident damage, neighbor's tree fell on your fence, someone broke your property
Starts from the date of the damage, not when you discovered it (usually).
Examples: Slip and fall, car accident with injury, dog bite
Short deadline — file quickly. Some states are as short as 1 year.
Examples: A check bounced, someone wrote a check that didn't clear
Most states have specific bad check statutes with their own deadlines.
Examples: Landlord withheld security deposit without itemization
Usually falls under written contract (lease) or property statutes depending on state.
Statute of Limitations by State — 12 Major States
Deadlines in years. Always verify with your state's current statutes — deadlines can change by legislation.
| State | Written contract | Oral contract | Property damage | Statute |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| California | 4 yrs | 2 yrs | 3 yrs | CCP § 337, 339, 338 |
| Texas | 4 yrs | 4 yrs | 2 yrs | Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. § 16.004 |
| Florida | 5 yrs | 4 yrs | 4 yrs | Fla. Stat. § 95.11 |
| New York | 6 yrs | 6 yrs | 3 yrs | NY CPLR § 213, 214 |
| Illinois | 5 yrs | 5 yrs | 5 yrs | 735 ILCS 5/13-205 |
| Pennsylvania | 4 yrs | 4 yrs | 2 yrs | 42 Pa. C.S. § 5525 |
| Georgia | 6 yrs | 4 yrs | 4 yrs | O.C.G.A. § 9-3-24 |
| Ohio | 6 yrs | 6 yrs | 4 yrs | O.R.C. § 2305.07 |
| Michigan | 6 yrs | 6 yrs | 3 yrs | MCL § 600.5807 |
| Arizona | 6 yrs | 3 yrs | 2 yrs | A.R.S. § 12-548, 543, 542 |
| Colorado | 3 yrs | 3 yrs | 3 yrs | C.R.S. § 13-80-101 |
| Washington | 6 yrs | 3 yrs | 3 yrs | RCW § 4.16.040 |
Source: Official state statutes. Always verify at your state legislature's website before filing.
When Does the Clock Start?
The clock (the accrual date) generally starts on the date the wrong occurred — the date the contract was breached, the date the damage happened, the date the check bounced, etc. But several doctrines can shift this:
- Discovery rule — in some states and for some claims, the clock doesn't start until you discovered (or reasonably should have discovered) the harm. Common in fraud and hidden defect cases.
- Continuous harm doctrine — for ongoing breaches (e.g., ongoing trespass), some courts allow the SOL to run from the last act, not the first.
- Landlord security deposit — the clock typically starts when the deposit should have been returned (end of the state's statutory return period), not the move-out date.
Check Your State's Small Claims Limit
Before you file, confirm your claim amount fits within your state's small claims court limit:
Small Claims Court Limit Calculator
Select your state to see the maximum amount you can sue for and applicable statutes of limitation.
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