How to File Small Claims for a Deposit (NY)

Step-by-step guide to filing a small claims case to recover your security deposit in New York.

Small Claims Court for Security Deposits (New York)

If your landlord still hasn’t returned your deposit, small claims court may be the next step.

At this point, the situation has moved beyond requests — and into formal resolution.


When Small Claims Makes Sense

You may be ready for this step if:

In New York, small claims court is designed for disputes like this.

But it is still a different stage than everything that comes before.


What Changes at This Stage

Up to this point, the goal is to resolve things directly.

Once you file:

That’s why most people try to resolve the issue before getting here.

And in many cases, that works.


What to Gather Before Filing

Before you file, you should have:

If your documents are organized, everything becomes easier.

👉 See: Evidence


What the Court Will Focus On

The judge will usually look at:

Clear facts matter more than long explanations.


How Filing Works (Overview)

At a high level, the process looks like this:

  1. confirm your claim amount fits within small claims limits
  2. file in the correct court for your rental
  3. complete the required forms
  4. pay the filing fee (or request a waiver)
  5. make sure the landlord is properly notified
  6. appear for your hearing with your documentation

For official forms and instructions, use New York court resources.


What You May Be Able to Recover

Depending on your case, you may recover:

The outcome depends heavily on documentation and timing.


Before You File (Important)

Many people reach this page when they’re close to filing — but not always fully prepared.

In a lot of cases, the issue isn’t the court step.

It’s that the earlier steps weren’t handled in a way that pushed the situation forward.

Before filing, it’s worth asking:

👉 Review your case: Evidence
👉 Send a proper request: Demand Letter


If It Reaches This Stage

If you’ve followed the process up to this point — documenting everything, sending clear requests, and keeping a timeline — you’re already in a strong position.

That’s really the goal.

Not just to try to resolve the issue early, but to make sure that if it does go further:

At that point, you’re not starting from scratch.

You’re prepared — whether that means handling small claims yourself or speaking with a tenant attorney if needed.


TL;DR

If you’re at the small claims stage:

You can file and handle this yourself.

But this is also the point where most people realize:

the earlier steps are what usually determine how strong your position is if it gets this far

If you want the letters, timing, and follow-up already laid out — especially before things reach this stage — the system just organizes the process so you don’t have to figure it out along the way.

👉 /new-york/toolkit/


Related Pages


Important

This page provides general educational information and is not legal advice. For official filing instructions, use New York court resources.