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Israeli Small Claims Court

Guide users through filing and navigating Israeli small claims court (tvi'ot ktanot). Use when user asks about small claims procedures, filing a lawsuit for consumer disputes, landlord-tenant claims, service complaints, court forms, filing fees, or self-representation in Israeli courts. Covers claim limits (NIS 39,900), the filing process via gov.il, evidence preparation, hearing procedures, judgments, and enforcement through the execution office (Hotza'a LaPo'al). Do NOT use for criminal matters, family law, or claims exceeding the small claims limit.

ID: il.litigation.israeli-small-claims-court Version: 0.1.0 License: MIT Author: skills-il Language: en Added: 2026-06-01
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Israeli Small Claims Court

Instructions

Step 1: What Qualifies for Small Claims Court

Small claims court (Beit Mishpat LeTvi'ot Ktanot) is a division of the Magistrate Court (Beit Mishpat Shalom) designed for simple, low-value disputes:

Parameter Details
Maximum claim amount NIS 39,900 (as of January 2026, updated periodically)
Minimum filing fee NIS 50 (or 1% of claim, whichever is higher)
Lawyer representation Not required; self-representation is the norm
Legal entities Both individuals and businesses can file/be sued
Appeals Very limited; appeal only on points of law to District Court

Types of claims accepted:

Claim Type Hebrew Examples
Monetary claims (Tvi'a Kaspeet) תביעה כספית Unpaid debts, refund demands, damage compensation
Product replacement or repair החלפה או תיקון מוצר Defective products, warranty claims
Transaction cancellation ביטול עסקה Cancel a purchase and get refund
Service disputes סכסוכי שירות Poor workmanship, incomplete service
Deposit return החזרת פיקדון Unreturned rental deposits
Property damage נזק לרכוש Damage caused by others to your property

What CANNOT be filed in small claims:

Exclusion Reason
Claims over NIS 39,900 Exceeds jurisdiction; file in Magistrate Court
Real estate ownership disputes Requires Magistrate or District Court
Family law matters Handled by Family Court (Beit Mishpat LeMishpacha)
Criminal complaints Handled by criminal courts or police
Government/municipality claims (some) May require Administrative Court
Defamation (Lashon HaRa) claims Complex cases often moved to regular court
Class action lawsuits Requires District Court

Step 2: Filing Process

How to file a small claims case in Israel:

Step Hebrew Details
1. Determine jurisdiction קביעת סמכות מקומית File in the court district where the defendant resides or where the transaction occurred
2. Prepare the claim form הכנת טופס תביעה Form available on gov.il under "tviyot ktanot"
3. Calculate filing fee חישוב אגרה 1% of claim amount, minimum NIS 50
4. Submit the claim הגשת התביעה Online via gov.il, by mail, or in person at court
5. Court sends summons בית המשפט שולח הזמנה Defendant notified by registered mail
6. Defendant responds הנתבע מגיב 15 days to file a response (ktav hagana)
7. Hearing scheduled קביעת מועד דיון Court sets hearing date

Filing fee calculation:

Claim Amount Filing Fee Notes
Up to NIS 5,000 NIS 50 Minimum fee
NIS 5,001 - NIS 39,900 1% of claim amount Rounded to nearest shekel
Counterclaim by defendant Same calculation Defendant can file counter-claim

Where to file (jurisdiction rules):

Scenario File At
Consumer dispute Court where transaction occurred OR defendant's residence
Landlord-tenant Court where property is located
Online purchase Court where plaintiff lives (consumer protection rule)
Service dispute Court where service was provided
Default Court where defendant resides or operates

Required information on the claim form:

Field Hebrew What to Include
Plaintiff details (Tove'a) תובע Full name, Teudat Zehut, address, phone, email
Defendant details (Nitba) נתבע Full name, Teudat Zehut or company number (if known), address
Claim amount (S'chum HaTvi'a) סכום התביעה Exact amount in NIS, with breakdown
Factual description (Teur HaUvdot) תיאור העובדות Clear, chronological account of what happened
Legal basis (Ilat HaTvi'a) עילת התביעה Why you are entitled to the claimed amount
Evidence list (Reshimat Ra'ayot) רשימת ראיות Documents, photos, receipts you will present

Step 3: Preparing Your Case

Evidence and documentation are critical for success in small claims court:

Evidence Type Hebrew How to Use
Written contract (Chozeh) חוזה Original or certified copy showing agreement terms
Receipts and invoices (Kabbalot v'Cheshboniot) קבלות וחשבוניות Proof of payment, amounts, dates
Photographs (Tzmunot) תצלומים Document damage, product condition, property state
Text messages / emails (Hodaot / Doa'r Electroni) הודעות / דואר אלקטרוני Communication trail showing dispute history
Expert opinion (Chovat Da'at Moomcheh) חוות דעת מומחה Professional assessment of damage or defect
Witness statements (Eduyot) עדויות Written or oral testimony from witnesses
Official records רשומות רשמיות Government documents, police reports if relevant

Evidence preparation tips:

Tip Details
Organize chronologically Present events in order with clear dates
Make copies 3 copies of everything: court, defendant, yourself
Highlight key points Mark important sections in contracts and correspondence
Create a summary timeline One-page chronology of events for the judge
Bring originals Court may want to see original documents
Prepare a demand letter (Mikhtav Drishah) Send to defendant before filing; shows good faith effort

Sending a demand letter (Mikhtav Drishah) before filing:

Element Details
Purpose Shows you attempted to resolve the dispute before court
Send method Registered mail (Do'ar Rashum) for proof of delivery
Content State claim, amount, deadline for payment (typically 14-30 days)
Legal effect Not required, but judges look favorably on plaintiffs who tried to settle
Timeline Send at least 14 days before filing the claim

Step 4: The Hearing Process

What to expect at the small claims court hearing:

Phase Hebrew What Happens
1. Check-in רישום Arrive early, check in at court clerk's office (mazkiru't)
2. Mediation offer (Gishur) הצעת גישור Court may offer mediation before hearing; voluntary
3. Judge opens hearing השופט פותח דיון Judge verifies parties' identity, explains procedure
4. Plaintiff presents case (Tove'a) התובע מציג Present your claim, evidence, and arguments
5. Defendant responds (Nitba) הנתבע מגיב Defendant presents defense and counter-evidence
6. Questions from judge שאלות מהשופט Judge may ask clarifying questions to both parties
7. Witnesses (if any) עדים (אם יש) Each side may call witnesses; judge may question them
8. Summary arguments טיעוני סיכום Brief final statements from each party
9. Judgment (Psak Din) פסק דין May be given immediately or within 14 days

Practical hearing tips:

Tip Details
Dress appropriately Business casual; show respect for the court
Be concise Judges appreciate brief, clear presentations
Stick to facts Avoid emotional arguments; focus on evidence
Address the judge "Kvod HaShofet" (Your Honor)
Bring all documents Organized in a folder, tabbed for easy reference
Arrive early At least 30 minutes before scheduled time
Be respectful to opponent Judges notice hostile or aggressive behavior
Accept mediation if offered Often results in faster, mutually acceptable resolution

If the defendant does not appear:

Scenario Result
Defendant absent without notice Judge may grant default judgment (psak din be'he'eder) in plaintiff's favor
Defendant requested postponement Judge may reschedule
Plaintiff absent Case may be dismissed (mchikat tvi'a)

Step 5: Judgments and Enforcement

After the hearing, understanding the judgment and enforcement process:

Outcome Hebrew What It Means
Judgment for plaintiff פסק דין לטובת התובע Defendant ordered to pay the claimed amount (or part)
Judgment for defendant פסק דין לטובת הנתבע Claim dismissed; plaintiff may owe court costs
Compromise (Psharah) פשרה Agreed settlement recorded as judgment
Partial judgment פסק דין חלקי Some claims granted, others denied

Enforcement through Hotza'a LaPo'al (Execution Office):

Step Hebrew Details
1. Wait for compliance period המתנה לתקופת ציות Defendant typically has 30 days to pay voluntarily
2. Open execution file (Tik Hotza'a LaPo'al) פתיחת תיק הוצאה לפועל File at the Execution Office with the judgment
3. Execution Office sends warning הוצאה לפועל שולחת אזהרה Defendant gets final notice to pay
4. Enforcement measures אמצעי אכיפה Wage garnishment, bank seizure, property liens
5. Travel restriction (Ikov Yetzi'a) עיכוב יציאה מהארץ Court can restrict defendant's travel abroad

Enforcement costs and timelines:

Item Details
Opening fee Approximately NIS 50-100
Interest Judgment amount accrues interest from ruling date
Lawyer for enforcement Optional; many handle enforcement themselves
Timeline to enforcement 30 days after judgment + processing time
Statute of limitations on enforcement 25 years for court judgments

Appeal options (very limited in small claims):

Aspect Details
Who can appeal Losing party
Appeal to District Court (Beit Mishpat Mechozi)
Grounds Points of law only (not factual disagreements)
Timeline 15 days from receiving the judgment
Permission required Must request leave to appeal (reshut le'irur)
Success rate Low; small claims judgments are rarely overturned

Step 6: Common Case Types

Typical small claims cases and their specific considerations:

Consumer disputes (Sichsuchey Tzrachnut):

Situation Key Evidence Legal Basis
Defective product (Mutzar Pagum) Purchase receipt, photos of defect, warranty Consumer Protection Law (Chok Haganat HaTzarchan)
Unauthorized charges Bank statements, correspondence with company Contract law, consumer protection
Failed service Contract, photos of poor work, expert opinion Contract law, service agreements
Online purchase issues Order confirmation, screenshots, delivery records Distance Sales Regulations (Takanot Mechira MeRachok)

Landlord-tenant disputes (Sichsuchey Mashkir-Socher):

Situation Key Evidence Legal Basis
Unreturned deposit (Pikadon) Lease contract, move-in photos, receipts Fair Rental Law, contract terms
Repair disputes Photos, written requests to landlord, repair invoices Fair Rental Law, landlord obligations
Illegal eviction Lease contract, communication records Tenant rights, contract law
Unpaid rent (landlord filing) Lease contract, bank records, demand letters Contract law

Service provider disputes:

Situation Key Evidence Legal Basis
Home renovation issues Contract, photos (before/after), expert opinion Contract law, consumer protection
Moving company damage Inventory list, photos of damaged items, insurance Contract law, bailment
Auto repair disputes Work order, invoices, independent mechanic opinion Consumer protection, contract
Professional services Engagement letter, correspondence, deliverables Contract law

Filing tips by case type:

Case Type Recommended Preparation
Consumer Gather all receipts, warranty documents, and complaint correspondence. Send demand letter citing Consumer Protection Law.
Landlord-tenant Compile lease, move-in/move-out photos, all written communications. Reference Fair Rental Law provisions.
Service Document the contract terms, what was promised vs. delivered, and get an independent expert opinion if applicable.
Debt collection Show proof of debt (contract, invoices), demand letters sent, and any partial payments received.

Examples

Example 1: Filing for Unreturned Rental Deposit

Input: "My landlord won't return my NIS 8,000 deposit after the lease ended 3 months ago. What do I do?" Output: Walk through the process: First, send a demand letter (mikhtav drishah) via registered mail giving the landlord 14 days to return the deposit. If no response, file a small claims case. The claim is well within the NIS 39,900 limit. Filing fee: 1% of NIS 8,000 = NIS 80. File at the court where the property is located. Prepare evidence: lease contract showing deposit terms, move-in and move-out photos, any communication about the deposit, and proof of the 60-day return period from the Fair Rental Law. The landlord must justify any deductions with documentation.

Example 2: Defective Product Claim

Input: "I bought a NIS 3,500 washing machine that broke after 2 months and the store refuses to fix or replace it." Output: Explain consumer rights: under the Consumer Protection Law, products must be fit for purpose. A washing machine failing after 2 months suggests a manufacturing defect. Steps: (1) Send a formal demand letter to the store citing the Consumer Protection Law. (2) If no resolution, file in small claims court where the purchase was made. Filing fee: NIS 50 (minimum). Evidence needed: purchase receipt, warranty card, photos or video of the malfunction, any correspondence with the store, and if possible a technician's report confirming the defect. Claim can include the product cost plus filing fee.

Example 3: Self-Representation at the Hearing

Input: "I have a small claims hearing next week, how do I prepare?" Output: Preparation checklist: (1) Organize all evidence in a folder with tabs and three copies (judge, defendant, yourself). (2) Write a brief timeline of events on one page. (3) Prepare a 3-5 minute opening statement covering: what happened, what you tried to resolve, and what you are claiming. (4) Anticipate the defendant's arguments and prepare counter-points. (5) Bring witnesses if applicable (notify them of the date). (6) Dress in business casual. (7) Arrive 30 minutes early to check in at the mazkirut (clerk's office). (8) Address the judge as "Kvod HaShofet." (9) Stay calm, be concise, and focus on facts, not emotions. (10) If the court offers mediation (gishur), consider accepting if a reasonable compromise is possible.

Example 4: Enforcing a Judgment

Input: "I won my small claims case but the defendant hasn't paid. What now?" Output: Explain the enforcement process: wait for the 30-day voluntary compliance period to expire. Then open an execution file (tik hotza'a lapo'al) at the nearest Execution Office. Bring the original judgment and your identification. Pay the opening fee (approximately NIS 50-100). The Execution Office will send the defendant a warning notice (azhara). If the defendant still does not pay, enforcement measures include: wage garnishment (ikul mishkoret), bank account seizure (ikul cheshbon bank), property liens (shi'abud), and potentially travel restrictions. The judgment amount will accrue interest from the ruling date. Many defendants pay after receiving the Execution Office warning.

Bundled Resources

References

  • references/demand-letter-template.md -- Bilingual (Hebrew and English) template for a pre-suit demand letter (michtav hatra'a) with field placeholders, customization guidance by case type (rental deposit, consumer, service, debt), and delivery method recommendations. Consult when a user needs to draft a demand letter before filing a small claims case.
  • references/evidence-guide.md -- Guide on what evidence to collect (documents, electronic communications, photos, expert opinions, witness statements) and how to present it in court. Includes evidence binder organization, common mistakes, and evidence-by-case-type checklists. Consult when a user is preparing evidence for a small claims hearing.

Scripts

  • scripts/filing-fee-calculator.py -- Calculates the filing fee based on claim amount (1% of claim, minimum NIS 50). Also shows total estimated costs and notes if the claim exceeds the small claims court limit. Run: python scripts/filing-fee-calculator.py --help

Recommended MCP Servers

MCP What It Adds
Israel Law MCP Full-text search of 66 Israeli statutes with 537 provisions, including Consumer Protection Law and other laws commonly cited in demand letters and small claims filings.
Kolzchut (All-Rights) Structured access to Israel's authoritative rights and entitlements knowledge base (כל-זכות), useful for looking up tenant rights, consumer rights, and procedural guides cited when preparing a claim.

Gotchas

  • The small claims court jurisdiction limit (NIS 39,900 as of January 2026) is updated periodically by the Ministry of Justice. Agents using an outdated limit will give incorrect filing advice. Always verify the current threshold.
  • Israeli legal citation format uses "Psakei Din" style, not Bluebook or OSCOLA. Agents trained on US or UK legal norms will produce improperly formatted citations in demand letters and court filings.
  • Filing fees in Israeli small claims court are calculated as 1% of the claim amount (minimum NIS 50), not a flat fee. Agents familiar with US small claims (which use flat filing fees) will miscalculate costs.
  • The Israeli Execution Office (Hotza'a LaPo'al) enforcement process is a distinct post-judgment system with its own procedures and fees. Agents may confuse it with regular court enforcement or skip this step entirely when advising on judgment collection.
  • Consumer protection claims for online purchases can be filed in the plaintiff's home district court, not the defendant's location. This is an Israeli-specific consumer protection rule that agents unfamiliar with Israeli jurisdiction rules will miss.

Reference Links

Source URL What to Check
Judicial Authority -- Filing a Small Claim https://www.gov.il/en/service/filing_a_small_claim Current jurisdiction limit, procedure, and official filing service
Judicial Authority -- Small Claims Courts Guide https://www.gov.il/en/pages/small_claims_courts_guide Official overview of the court, jurisdiction rules, and forms
Judicial Authority -- Court Fees https://www.gov.il/he/departments/general/fees_3 Current filing fee formulas for small claims and related courts
Kol-Zchut -- Filing a Small Claim https://www.kolzchut.org.il/he/הגשת_תביעה_קטנה Step-by-step rights guide in Hebrew (unofficial but well-sourced)
Consumer Protection Law 1981 https://www.nevo.co.il/law_html/law01/p214m1_001.htm Statutory basis for consumer claims (fitness for purpose, warranty, distance sales)
Courts Law [Consolidated] 1984 https://www.nevo.co.il/law_html/law00/74849.htm Small claims jurisdiction and Magistrate Court limits (currently NIS 2.5M)

Troubleshooting

Error: "Claim amount exceeds NIS 39,900"

Cause: The dispute involves more money than the small claims court limit. Solution: You have three options: (1) Reduce the claim to NIS 39,900 and waive the excess (forfeiting the difference). (2) File in Magistrate Court (Beit Mishpat Shalom) which handles claims up to NIS 2.5 million (lawyer recommended but not required). (3) Split the claim if it involves genuinely separate transactions (not allowed for a single transaction). Consider whether the cost and complexity of Magistrate Court is worth the additional amount, as small claims is faster and simpler.

Error: "Cannot locate the defendant's address"

Cause: Need a valid address to serve court summons. Solution: Try these methods to find the defendant's address: check the original contract or invoice for address details. Search the Companies Registry (Rasham HaChevrut) if the defendant is a business. Use the Population Registry via a lawyer (requires legal authorization). Check online business directories or the defendant's website. If the defendant is a registered business, the registered office address is publicly available. The court clerk (mazkirut) may assist with service alternatives if the defendant cannot be located.

Error: "Defendant filed a counterclaim (tvi'a negdit)"

Cause: The defendant is claiming money from you as part of the same dispute. Solution: A counterclaim is common, especially in landlord-tenant and service disputes. You must respond to the counterclaim within 15 days, just as the defendant had to respond to your claim. Prepare evidence refuting the counterclaim. Both the original claim and counterclaim will be heard together in the same hearing. The judge will decide both claims. Do not panic; counterclaims are often a negotiation tactic. Focus on strengthening your original case with solid evidence.

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