EvictionsNC tenant guide

How to sue your landlord in small-claims court in NC

North Carolina's magistrate court is built for tenants: no lawyer required, low filing fee, fast hearing.

Hall & Dixon, PLLC2026-04-229 min read
Documentary photo: a county courthouse entrance

If a landlord won't return your deposit or make good on a clear obligation, North Carolina's small-claims process — heard by a magistrate — is designed for exactly this. You don't need a lawyer, the filing fee is modest, and cases usually resolve in weeks, not months.

Is your case a fit?

Magistrate court handles money claims up to $10,000. Common tenant claims include unreturned security deposits, duplicate or improper charges, and damages for a landlord's breach. If you want the landlord ordered to do something (not just pay), or your claim is larger, that may belong in district court instead.

Before you file: send a demand

Courts (and magistrates) like to see that you gave the landlord a chance to fix it. A dated demand letter citing the relevant statute does that — and often resolves the matter before you ever file.

The steps

  1. Gather your evidence. Lease, proof you paid the deposit, your move-out/surrender date, your written forwarding address, photos, and all communications.
  2. File the complaint. Go to the Clerk of Court in the county where the property is (or the landlord lives) and file a small-claim complaint. Pay the filing fee and the cost of service.
  3. Serve the landlord. The court arranges service (often by sheriff or certified mail). The landlord must be properly served for the case to proceed.
  4. Show up to the hearing. Bring two organized copies of everything. Tell the magistrate the facts plainly, in order, and hand up your documents.
  5. Collect the judgment. Winning is step one; collecting is step two. The court can guide you on enforcing a judgment if the landlord doesn't pay.

What to expect

Magistrate hearings are informal but real. Be on time, be organized, and stick to facts and documents. Many landlords settle once they see you've filed and shown up prepared.

What to do today

Most deposit cases settle before a hearing once a demand letter makes the claim concrete. An attorney can send that demand first — and tell you honestly whether small claims is the right next step.

Have an attorney send it — $149

This is general information, not legal advice — but the NC small-claims process is genuinely accessible, and tenants use it successfully every day.

Sources
  1. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 7A-210 et seq. (small claim actions).
  2. NC Judicial Branch self-help resources for small claims.

This is general information about North Carolina law, not legal advice, and does not create an attorney–client relationship. For advice on your situation, have an attorney review your facts.

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