How to Sue a Cell Phone Company in South Carolina Small Claims Court
Overcharges, broken contracts & deposit disputes
In South Carolina, cell phone company disputes are handled in the Magistrate Court. You can sue for up to $7,500 without a lawyer — making small claims the fastest and most affordable way to resolve a cell phone company dispute. Cell phone carriers — AT&T, Verizon, T-Mobile, and others — are among the most complained-about companies in the US. When your carrier overcharges you, breaks a contract promise, or refuses to return a deposit, small claims court is often the only leverage consumers have.
What You Can Sue a Cell Phone Company For in South Carolina
- ✓ Overcharged on monthly bill compared to promised plan price
- ✓ Early termination fee charged despite carrier breaking contract first
- ✓ Security deposit not returned after account closed in good standing
- ✓ Carrier promised to pay off your old phone and didn't
- ✓ Data throttled contrary to 'unlimited' plan promise
- ✓ Unauthorized charges or premium services added without consent
South Carolina Small Claims — Key Facts
Step-by-Step: Suing a Cell Phone Company in South Carolina
Confirm your claim is within South Carolina's $7,500 limit
South Carolina's small claims limit is $7,500. If your damages are higher, you can reduce your claim to the limit or file in South Carolina civil court. Use our South Carolina Small Claims Limit guide for the full details.
Send a demand letter first
File an FCC complaint at fcc.gov/consumers/guides/filing-informal-complaint first — carriers must respond to FCC complaints within 30 days, which often produces a resolution before you even file in court. Courts in South Carolina expect plaintiffs to have made a good-faith attempt to resolve the dispute. A demand letter also creates a paper trail and often prompts payment without any court filing.
Gather your evidence
Your case is only as strong as your evidence. Collect everything before filing — see the checklist below for exactly what you need for a cell phone company dispute.
Find the right South Carolina courthouse
File at the Magistrate Court in the South Carolina county where the cell phone company is located, does business, or where the dispute occurred. For businesses, check the South Carolina Secretary of State website for the correct legal name and registered agent address.
Pay the filing fee ($80–$140)
South Carolina small claims filing fees range from $80 to $140 depending on your claim amount. Use our South Carolina Filing Fee Calculator to find the exact amount for your claim. Keep your file-stamped copy.
Serve the defendant properly
The cell phone company must be formally notified of the lawsuit. South Carolina courts provide specific instructions — follow them exactly. Improper service is one of the most common reasons cases are dismissed.
Present your case at the hearing
Bring 3 organized copies of all evidence. Present your case in order: what happened, how much you lost, and why the cell phone company is responsible. Most South Carolina small claims hearings last 15–30 minutes. Stay calm, stick to facts, and let the judge ask questions.
Evidence Checklist: Suing a Cell Phone Company in South Carolina
Tips for Winning Your Cell Phone Company Case in South Carolina
File an FCC complaint before going to court — it's free, carriers take them seriously, and it often resolves billing disputes without litigation.
Always get plan price promises in writing (chat transcript, email) — verbal promises from customer service are almost impossible to prove.
Cell carriers have arbitration clauses, but most allow small claims court as an exception — check your specific carrier's agreement.
Screenshot every chat conversation with customer service — they often don't send email confirmations.
Check South Carolina's Exact Filing Fee
Filing fees in South Carolina range from $80–$140 depending on your claim amount. Find the exact fee before you file.
South Carolina Filing Fee Calculator →