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Updated May 2026 Los Angeles County, CA Superior Court

Los Angeles County, CA Small Claims Court (2026)

Sue for up to $12,500 in LA County without an attorney. Filing fees, the correct courthouse, service rules, and what to expect at your hearing.

$12,500
Individual limit
$30–$100
Filing fee
30–70 days
Hearing wait
4 yrs
Written contract SOL
LegalCostCalculator Editorial Team Data sourced from official government websites  ·  Last reviewed:

Not legal advice. Court fees, addresses, and procedures are sourced from official California court websites and state statutes (Cal. Code Civ. Proc. § 116.110 et seq.). Verify current information at courts.ca.gov before filing. See our data methodology →

LA Superior Court — Small Claims Division (Stanley Mosk)

Address (Downtown)

111 N. Hill St.
Los Angeles, CA 90012

Contact & Hours

Phone: (213) 974-5555
Mon–Fri: 8:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m.
Closed court holidays

Filing Fee Schedule

Up to $1,500: $30
$1,501–$5,000: $50
$5,001–$10,000: $75
$10,001–$12,500: $100

Service of Process

Certified mail (by non-party): $10–$15
Process server: $40–$100
Sheriff: $40–$75
Note: You cannot serve the defendant yourself

California Courts — Small Claims Self-Help (courts.ca.gov)
⚠️
File at the right courthouse — LA has 36 district courthouses

Los Angeles County is enormous. You must file at the courthouse that covers the defendant's address or where the dispute occurred. Filing at the wrong courthouse will result in dismissal. Use courts.ca.gov to find your district courthouse before filing. Common options: Stanley Mosk (downtown LA), Van Nuys Courthouse, Torrance Courthouse, Pasadena Courthouse, Pomona Courthouse.

How to File Small Claims in Los Angeles County

1
Confirm your claim amount and correct courthouse
Individuals can claim up to $12,500. Businesses are capped at $6,250. Use courts.ca.gov to find the district courthouse covering the defendant's address or the location where the dispute occurred.
2
Complete Form SC-100 (Plaintiff's Claim)
Download Plaintiff's Claim and Order to Go to Small Claims Court (Form SC-100) from courts.ca.gov. Enter the defendant's exact legal name and address, the amount owed, and the factual basis. For businesses, use the registered entity name from the CA Secretary of State (bizfileonline.sos.ca.gov).
3
File in person or online
In person: bring your completed SC-100 to the clerk's window at your chosen courthouse. Online e-filing is available at courts.ca.gov for most districts. Pay $30–$100 depending on claim amount. You'll receive a hearing date and case number.
4
Serve the defendant — critical CA rules
California has strict service rules. You cannot serve the defendant yourself. Service must be done by a person at least 18 years old who is not a party to the case. Methods: certified mail (cheapest), process server ($40–$100), or Sheriff. Service must be completed at least 15 days before the hearing (20 days if the defendant is outside the county).
5
File your Proof of Service (Form SC-104)
After service, whoever served the defendant must complete and sign Form SC-104 (Proof of Service). File this with the court at least 5 days before your hearing. If you forget, your case may be continued or dismissed.
6
Prepare your evidence
Three copies of all documents: contracts, receipts, photos, texts, invoices, bank records. CA judges hear many cases per session — be ready to state your case in 5 minutes. A one-page timeline summary is highly effective.
7
Attend your hearing
Arrive 15 minutes early. Check the posted docket. When called, state your name, case number, and requested judgment. Judges rule the same day in most cases. If the defendant doesn't appear and was properly served, request a default judgment.

California Statute of Limitations

Claim Type Time Limit California Code
Written contracts4 yearsCCP § 337
Oral contracts2 yearsCCP § 339
Property damage3 yearsCCP § 338
Personal injury2 yearsCCP § 335.1
Security deposits4 years (written lease)Civil Code § 1950.5

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the small claims limit in Los Angeles County, CA?
The small claims limit in Los Angeles County is $12,500 for individuals (natural persons). Businesses and other entities are capped at $6,250 — and businesses may only file more than 2 claims exceeding $2,500 per calendar year with special approval. Claims above the limit must go to the Limited Civil or Unlimited Civil division of LA Superior Court.
Where do I file small claims in Los Angeles County?
You must file at the LA Superior Court courthouse in the district where the defendant lives, works, or where the contract was signed or breach occurred. The main downtown courthouse is the Stanley Mosk Courthouse at 111 N. Hill St., Los Angeles, CA 90012. LA County has numerous district courthouses — use the California Courts self-help site at courts.ca.gov to find your district courthouse before filing.
How much does it cost to file small claims in LA County?
California small claims filing fees (Gov. Code § 116.230): $30 for claims up to $1,500; $50 for $1,501–$5,000; $75 for $5,001–$10,000; $100 for $10,001–$12,500. These apply to your first 12 filings per year — frequent filers pay $75 or $100 for all amounts. Process server fees add $40–$100. Total upfront cost: $70–$200.
Can a business sue in LA small claims court?
Businesses can file small claims in California, but with tighter rules: the maximum is $6,250 (not $12,500), and businesses that filed more than 12 small claims in the previous 12 months must pay higher filing fees. Corporations must be represented by an officer or employee — not outside counsel — in small claims court.
How long does small claims court take in Los Angeles?
LA County small claims cases are typically scheduled 30–70 days after filing. Downtown courthouses (Stanley Mosk) handle extremely high volume and lean toward the longer end. Satellite courthouses (e.g., Van Nuys, Torrance, Pasadena) often schedule faster. You'll receive your hearing date at the time of filing.
Can I sue for emotional distress in California small claims?
Generally no — California small claims court handles money damages only. Emotional distress may be included in your damages claim if it arises from a breach of contract or property damage, but standalone emotional distress claims are usually not appropriate for small claims. If emotional distress is your primary claim, consult an attorney about filing in Limited Civil Court.

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