How to Sue a Contractor in Small Claims Court
Incomplete work, shoddy repairs & contractor fraud
Hiring a contractor who disappears mid-job or delivers substandard work is frustrating — and costly. Small claims court is one of the most effective tools consumers have to recover money from bad contractors without spending thousands on a lawyer.
Success tip
Documentation of the agreed scope of work and photos of incomplete/defective work significantly increase your odds of winning.Small Claims Demand Letter Template
A professionally written demand letter template that puts the other party on notice before you file. Courts expect a demand letter before you sue — and it gets you paid 40% of the time without ever stepping foot in a courtroom. Works in all 50 states.
- 6 variants included: General, Landlord/Tenant, Contractor, Unpaid Loan, Property Damage, Follow-Up Notice
- Fillable HTML — open in any browser, click fields to type, print to PDF when done
- Editable Word (.docx) — fill in Microsoft Word using Find & Replace
- Certified mail instructions included — how to send, what to keep as proof
- Instant download — ready to fill in and send today
Code SUMMER20 = 20% off at checkout
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What You Can Sue a Contractor For
- ✓ Contractor abandoned the job before completion
- ✓ Work was defective or not up to code
- ✓ Contractor overcharged or billed for work not done
- ✓ Materials paid for but not installed
- ✓ Contractor damaged your property during the job
- ✓ Deposit paid but work never started
Step-by-Step: How to Sue a Contractor
Check your state's small claims limit
Small claims court handles money disputes only — typically $2,500 to $25,000 depending on your state. Use our Small Claims Limit Calculator to find your state's exact maximum. If your damages exceed the limit, you can reduce your claim to fit or file in a higher civil court.
Send a demand letter first
Send a certified mail demand letter giving the contractor 10–14 days to refund or return to complete the work. Courts view this positively and it may resolve the dispute without trial. Courts expect plaintiffs to have made a good-faith attempt to resolve the dispute before filing. A demand letter also creates a paper trail that becomes evidence.
Gather your evidence
Your case is only as strong as your evidence. Start collecting everything now — before filing — so you're fully prepared for your hearing. See the evidence checklist below for exactly what you need.
Find the right court and defendant information
File in the small claims court for the county where the contractor is located, does business, or where the dispute occurred. You'll need the defendant's full legal name and address. For businesses, check your state's Secretary of State website for the correct legal entity name and registered agent address.
File your claim and pay the filing fee
Submit the plaintiff's claim form at the courthouse (or online in many states). Filing fees range from $30–$300 depending on your state and claim amount. Use our Filing Fee Calculator to find the exact cost. Keep your file-stamped copy.
Serve the defendant
The defendant must be formally notified of the lawsuit. Many states allow certified mail service; others require a sheriff or process server. Follow the court's instructions exactly — improper service is one of the most common reasons cases get dismissed.
Prepare and attend your hearing
Bring 3 organized copies of all evidence (one for the judge, one for the defendant, one for yourself). Present your case in order: what happened, how much you lost, and why the defendant is responsible. Let the judge ask questions. Most small claims hearings last 15–30 minutes.
Evidence Checklist: Suing a Contractor
Expert Tips for Your Contractor Case
Get at least one written estimate from another licensed contractor to fix or finish the work — this becomes your damages evidence.
Check if the contractor is licensed and bonded in your state. Unlicensed contractors may have committed fraud — a stronger claim.
If the contractor is a business (LLC or corporation), sue the business entity AND the individual owner if they personally dealt with you.
Bring the original contract, any change orders, and all payment receipts. Courts need to see the full financial picture.
Ready to File? Prepare Your Documents First
LegalZoom helps you draft a professional demand letter and small claims filing documents — reviewed by attorneys. A strong demand letter resolves many disputes before you ever set foot in court.
A local attorney bills $300+/hour for this. LegalZoom does it flat-fee, online.
Related Guides
Small Claims Demand Letter Template
A professionally written demand letter template that puts the other party on notice before you file. Courts expect a demand letter before you sue — and it gets you paid 40% of the time without ever stepping foot in a courtroom. Works in all 50 states.
Code SUMMER20 = 20% off at checkout