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The civil suit filing process in India 2026 is governed by the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (CPC) and shaped by an accelerating shift toward digital court infrastructure. Whether you are a plaintiff pursuing a money recovery claim, a company enforcing a contract, or an SME owner contesting a property dispute, you must navigate a defined sequence of procedural steps, from pre-action demand through e‑filing, service of summons, evidence and trial to final decree. This guide sets out each stage in practical, sequential detail, explains the documents needed, maps realistic timelines and costs, and highlights the 2026 digitalisation changes that now affect how plaints are filed, hearings are conducted and service is effected across Indian courts.
A civil suit is the principal mechanism under the CPC for resolving non-criminal disputes between private parties in India. The procedure applies to any claim where the plaintiff seeks a court-ordered remedy, monetary compensation, specific performance of a contract, an injunction, a declaration of title, partition of property, or restitution of conjugal rights. Virtually every individual, Hindu Undivided Family, partnership firm, LLP, company, trust or statutory body with a legally recognised interest (locus standi) may institute a suit, provided it falls within the court’s territorial and pecuniary jurisdiction.
Suits are commonly filed for money recovery (loan defaults, unpaid invoices), breach of contract, possession or title disputes over immovable property, partition among co-owners, and specific performance of sale agreements. Where the subject matter involves a “commercial dispute” above the specified value, the claim is routed to the Commercial Division or Commercial Court under the Commercial Courts Act, 2015. For an overview of that fast-track pathway, see the related guide on how to file a commercial suit in India.
In 2026, the process has been reshaped by the expansion of mandatory e‑filing to additional District Courts, standardised digital document formats, remote-first case management hearings, and pre-institution mediation gateways in several High Court commercial lists. The core statutory steps remain unchanged, but the way you prepare, file and appear has shifted materially, those changes are addressed in detail below.
Before preparing a plaint, confirm that the chosen court has jurisdiction on three axes:
The plaintiff must also have legal capacity to sue. An individual must be of sound mind and a major. A company or LLP sues through an authorised representative backed by a board resolution. A minor or person of unsound mind sues through a “next friend” appointed under Order XXXII, CPC.
Industry observers expect the pre-institution mediation requirements introduced under Section 12A of the Commercial Courts Act to continue expanding in 2026, with several High Courts extending similar gateways to non-commercial civil lists. Check the practice directions of the specific court before filing: failure to attempt pre-institution mediation where mandated can result in the plaint being returned. Retain proof of any mediation attempt or settlement negotiation, it will be needed as an annexure.
The following nine steps map the complete sequence from pre-action preparation through to execution. The table below summarises each stage, the responsible party and typical duration; the detailed guidance follows.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-action demand and attempts at settlement | Plaintiff / counsel | 1–4 weeks |
| Draft and file plaint | Plaintiff / counsel | 1–2 weeks (drafting) + same-day e‑filing or 1–3 business days physical filing |
| Issue of summons and service | Court registry / process server | 1–4 weeks (varies by court and method) |
| Defendant appearance / written statement | Defendant / counsel | 30 days from service (standard), extensions possible |
| Interim applications (injunction / attachment) | Plaintiff / counsel | Urgent hearing within 1–14 days (varies) |
| Framing of issues and evidence schedule | Court | 1–3 months after pleadings complete |
| Evidence and trial | Parties / court | 6–24 months (case-complexity dependent) |
| Judgment and decree | Court | 1–6 months after trial concludes |
| Execution / enforcement | Successful party / court | 1–12+ months (depending on attachment complexity) |
Identify your cause of action, quantify the relief you seek (damages, specific performance, injunction), and collect all supporting evidence, contracts, correspondence, receipts, photographs and witness details. Where the contract requires a pre-litigation notice, or where you intend to invoke a statutory notice period, serve a written demand on the prospective defendant by registered post or courier and retain proof of dispatch and delivery. This step typically takes 1–4 weeks and serves a dual purpose: it preserves evidence and creates a settlement window that courts view favourably. If pre-institution mediation is mandatory (see eligibility section above), initiate it at this stage and retain the mediation outcome certificate.
The plaint is the foundational document of any civil suit. It must comply with Order VII, Rule 1, CPC and include: the names, descriptions and addresses of all parties; a clear statement of the facts constituting the cause of action and when it arose; the relief claimed; the valuation of the suit for purposes of jurisdiction and court fees; and a verification by the plaintiff under Order VI, Rule 15, CPC.
Attach as annexures all documents on which you rely, numbered sequentially with an index. Prepare a separate affidavit verifying the plaint’s contents. Accurate valuation is critical: undervaluation can lead to rejection of the plaint or return for correction, while overvaluation inflates court fees unnecessarily. Consider preparing a valuation memo setting out the basis of calculation, this is especially important in property and specific-performance suits where market value and stamp-duty implications intersect.
Match the suit’s value and subject matter to the court with appropriate pecuniary and territorial jurisdiction. Compute the court fee payable under the applicable state Court Fees Act, rates vary by state and by the nature of the relief (ad valorem for money claims, fixed fee for certain declaratory suits). For a worked example, see the costs section below. If you are unsure whether the suit should go to a District Court, Small Causes Court, Commercial Court or High Court original side, seek advice before filing: an objection to jurisdiction after institution wastes time and costs.
In 2026, e‑filing is available, and increasingly mandatory, across High Courts and a growing number of District Courts. The national eCourts portal and individual High Court e‑filing modules (for example, the Delhi High Court e‑filing system) accept plaints uploaded as searchable PDF files. The typical e‑filing workflow is as follows:
For courts that still require physical filing, present the plaint with the requisite number of copies (one for the court record and one for each defendant), along with original court fee stamps or challan, the signed Vakalatnama and a process fee for service of summons. The filing clerk will endorse the date of filing on the plaint, this is the date of institution.
Once the plaint is accepted and registered, the court issues summons to the defendant under Order V, CPC. Service is effected by the court’s process server, by registered post with acknowledgement due, by approved courier, or, where permitted by the court’s practice directions, by electronic means (email or messaging service). If service cannot be effected by these methods, the plaintiff may apply for substituted service (newspaper publication, affixation at the last known address) under Order V, Rule 20, CPC. The summons directs the defendant to appear and file a written statement within the time specified. Effective service is essential: defective service can delay the suit by months and may be challenged on appeal.
The defendant must enter appearance and file a written statement within 30 days of service of summons, as prescribed by Order VIII, Rule 1, CPC. The court may grant an extension of up to a further 90 days in total, but not beyond that statutory ceiling. The written statement must respond to each paragraph of the plaint, raise any preliminary objections (jurisdiction, limitation, misjoinder), set out the defence on merits and attach supporting documents. If the defendant fails to appear or file a written statement, the court may proceed ex parte under Order IX, CPC, meaning the plaintiff’s case is heard without opposition.
If the plaintiff faces irreparable harm pending trial, for instance, the defendant is disposing of disputed property or dissipating assets, the plaintiff should move for interim relief at the earliest opportunity. Temporary injunctions are sought under Order XXXIX, Rules 1 and 2, CPC. The court applies a three-part test: prima facie case, balance of convenience, and irreparable injury. Attachment before judgment may be sought under Order XXXVIII, CPC where there is a risk the defendant may defeat the decree by removing assets. Interim applications are typically heard on an urgent basis within 1–14 days, though timelines vary by court.
After pleadings close, the court proceeds to frame “issues”, the specific questions of fact and law that require determination. The parties may seek discovery and inspection of documents under Order XI, CPC, deliver interrogatories under Order XI, Rule 1, and apply for admissions of fact or documents under Order XII, CPC. Evidence is led through affidavits of examination-in-chief, followed by cross-examination. Expert evidence (valuers, forensic accountants, engineers) is submitted by affidavit and tested in cross-examination. Practical tip: organise documents chronologically, number every page and prepare a document index, courts and opposing counsel expect this, and sloppy document management slows the trial.
The trial proceeds through final arguments after evidence is concluded. The judge pronounces judgment and, if the plaintiff succeeds, draws up a decree. The decree is the enforceable order, it may direct payment of money, delivery of property, execution of a document or any other specific relief. Execution proceedings under Order XXI, CPC convert the decree into practical enforcement: attachment and sale of the judgment-debtor’s assets, garnishee orders against bank accounts, or delivery of possession.
The unsuccessful party may file a first appeal under Section 96, CPC (typically within 30 days in the High Court or 90 days in certain District Court appeals, depending on the state rules) and a second appeal under Section 100, CPC on a substantial question of law.
The table below lists the documents you must prepare before filing. Format each document as a searchable PDF for e‑filing; retain originals for production during trial.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Plaint with particulars of relief and valuation | Drafted and verified by the plaintiff; PDF for e‑filing; include a numbered index of annexures. |
| Original or certified copies of documents supporting the cause of action | Contracts, invoices, receipts, title deeds, correspondence. Use certified copies where originals cannot be produced. |
| Affidavit of verification | Signed by the plaintiff per Order VI, Rule 15, CPC; scanned signed copy for e‑filing; original for physical filing. |
| Vakalatnama / power of attorney | Vakalatnama for counsel; for High Courts and Supreme Court, specific formats apply. |
| Identity and address proof of all parties | Aadhaar, passport or PAN for individuals; board resolution and incorporation certificate for companies. |
| Court fee payment proof | E‑receipt from the court portal or original court fee stamps affixed to the plaint. |
| Evidence supporting interim relief (if sought) | Bank statements, photographs, valuation reports, urgent affidavits. |
| Service address details and supporting proof | Defendant’s registered office or residential address with proof (for substituted service applications). |
| Certified translations (if documents are in a regional language) | Translator’s affidavit and, where required, notarised or attested translation. |
| Proof of statutory pre-conditions (if applicable) | Pre-litigation notice under the contract, mediation attempt certificate, or demand notice acknowledgement. |
Number each annexure sequentially (Annexure P‑1, P‑2, etc. for the plaintiff). Convert every document to searchable PDF using OCR. Follow the court’s file-naming convention, typically “AnnexureP1_DocumentDescription.pdf”. Keep individual file sizes below the portal’s upload limit (often 25 MB per file). Prepare a master index listing each annexure, its description, date and page count.
The verification affidavit must state which paragraphs of the plaint are true to the deponent’s knowledge and which are based on information and belief. It must be sworn before a notary or an officer authorised to administer oaths. For e‑filing, upload a scanned copy of the signed and notarised affidavit; some courts now accept affidavits bearing the advocate’s digital signature certificate (DSC). Confirm the specific court’s requirements before filing.
Statutory deadlines are fixed; practical timelines vary by court workload. The table below sets out key statutory and practical time limits.
| Event | Statutory / practical deadline | Authority |
|---|---|---|
| Written statement by defendant | 30 days from service; maximum 120 days with extensions | Order VIII, Rule 1, CPC |
| Discovery / interrogatories application | Within the time fixed by the court after framing of issues | Order XI, CPC |
| First appeal | 30 days (High Court) or 90 days (certain state rules) | Section 96, CPC; state amendments |
| Second appeal | 90 days | Section 100, CPC |
| Execution application | Within 12 years from the date of decree | Article 136, Limitation Act, 1963 |
Under the Limitation Act, 1963, every suit must be filed within the prescribed limitation period, typically 3 years for money claims and contract disputes, and 12 years for suits relating to immovable property (possession). The limitation period begins on the date the cause of action accrues. Filing after the limitation period bars the suit entirely, unless the court condones the delay, and condonation is discretionary and rarely granted for civil suits.
As a practical guide: a simple money recovery suit in a District Court may conclude at first instance within 1–3 years. An ordinary property dispute typically takes 2–5 years. A complex commercial contract suit with interim injunction applications, expert evidence and appeals can extend to 5–10 years or more. Delays are driven primarily by court backlog, frequent adjournments and the number of interlocutory applications.
| Item | Amount (indicative) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Court fees (ad valorem) | INR 100 – INR 1,00,000+ | Computed under the state Court Fees Act based on claim value. Example: for a ₹5,00,000 money claim in Maharashtra, court fees may be approximately 4–7.5% of the suit value depending on the applicable slab, confirm with the state fee schedule. |
| Advocate’s fees (filing stage) | INR 5,000 – INR 50,000+ | Varies by city and seniority; retainer or stage-wise billing. |
| Advocate’s fees (trial and hearings) | INR 25,000 – INR 5,00,000+ | Complex commercial matters and senior counsel engagements cost substantially more. |
| Process server / service costs | INR 500 – INR 10,000 | Depends on method (registered post, courier, substituted service) and number of defendants. |
| Translation / notarisation | INR 500 – INR 10,000 | Required for foreign-language or regional-language documents. |
| Expert witness fees | INR 10,000 – INR 5,00,000 | Valuers, forensic accountants, engineers, medical experts. |
| Miscellaneous (photocopying, courier, travel) | INR 1,000 – INR 50,000 | Cumulative cost over the life of the suit; higher for out-station hearings. |
Legal fees attract GST at the applicable rate. Where the advocate is an individual or a partnership, the reverse-charge mechanism may apply, requiring the client to remit GST directly. Stamp duty is payable on certain reliefs (specific performance, conveyance). For high-value matters involving foreign expert witnesses, withholding-tax obligations may arise under the Income Tax Act. Parties are advised to consult a chartered accountant to confirm the tax treatment specific to their claim value and arrangement.
The most significant procedural development affecting the civil suit filing process in India 2026 is the continued expansion of court digitalisation under the eCourts Mission Mode Project. The likely practical effects for litigants include:
Practitioners should check the specific court’s e‑filing portal (accessible via the national eCourts platform or the relevant High Court website) and the latest practice directions before filing. Where doubt exists, contact the court registry directly.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Pooja Tidke at Parinam Law Associates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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