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Amendments to Chapters I and II of the County Court Civil Procedure Rules 2018 take effect on 13 July 2026, introducing binding changes to interlocutory timelines, service and notice requirements, and disclosure obligations for proceedings in both the Common Law Division and the Commercial Division. This guide to County Court civil procedure 2026 sets out the practical compliance steps that claimants, defendants, plaintiff solicitors, small-firm defence counsel and self-represented parties in Victoria need to follow, from pre-filing checks through to trial readiness.
Whether you are filing a new claim on or after 13 July 2026 or managing an ongoing matter that straddles the effective date, the checklists, timeline tables and cost breakdowns below will help you avoid procedural errors and costs sanctions.
The County Court of Victoria exercises unlimited civil jurisdiction and hears the majority of contested civil claims in the state across two principal divisions: the Common Law Division (personal injury, property damage, debt recovery, general torts) and the Commercial Division (contractual disputes, corporations matters, trade practices claims). The County Court Civil Procedure Rules 2018, made under the County Court Act 1958 (Vic), govern how proceedings are commenced, served, interlocuted and tried in both divisions.
The amendments commencing on 13 July 2026 touch Chapters I and II of those Rules. Industry observers expect that the amended provisions will affect every new proceeding filed on or after that date. Parties with existing matters should check the transitional and savings provisions in the remaking instrument, the likely practical effect is that procedural steps not yet taken in an ongoing proceeding will be governed by the new rule wording from the commencement date, while steps already completed under the old rules will be preserved.
All civil claims in the Common Law Division and Commercial Division are in scope. This includes institutional litigation (insurer subrogation, bank recovery proceedings) as well as individual claims. Self-represented parties are bound by the same rules. The amendments do not alter the Court’s jurisdictional limits but do change certain procedural mechanics within each division.
Before filing an originating process, claimants must confirm that the County Court has jurisdiction over the claim. The Court’s civil jurisdiction is unlimited as to quantum, but certain subject-matter categories (such as defamation) have specific pre-action requirements under separate Victorian legislation. Defendants must consider whether to challenge jurisdiction at the earliest opportunity, the amended Rules do not change the jurisdictional threshold, but they do tighten the timeline within which objections must be raised.
Key prerequisites include completing any mandatory pre-action steps (for example, pre-litigation correspondence required by applicable practice notes or legislation), confirming the correct division (Common Law or Commercial), and identifying valid service addresses for all parties. Institutional claimants, corporations, insurers and trustees, must ensure their registered office address is current on the ASIC register, as the amended Rules reinforce that service on a corporation must comply with the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) provisions on service. For representative proceedings or multi-defendant claims, each party’s service details must be verified individually before filing.
The following numbered steps walk through the procedural sequence under the County Court civil procedure 2026 framework. Each step reflects the amended rule requirements effective 13 July 2026.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| File originating process (updated forms per 2026 amendments) | Claimant | Day 0, file on or after 13 July 2026 |
| Serve originating process and file Affidavit of Service | Claimant | Within 7–14 days of filing |
| File Defence / Response | Defendant | 21–28 days from service |
| Initial disclosure, list of documents | Each disclosing party | 28 days from close of pleadings (or per court order) |
| Interlocutory application for urgent relief | Applicant party | Hearing within 7–21 days (urgency-dependent) |
| Case management conference / directions hearing | Both parties | 6–12 weeks from close of pleadings |
| Mediation / ADR compliance | Both parties | As ordered, typically within 3–6 months of directions |
| Trial readiness (bundles, chronology, authorities) | Both parties | As directed, usually 4–6 weeks before trial date |
The following documents checklist covers the core filings a claimant or defendant will need to prepare under the County Court civil procedure 2026 framework. Format requirements should be confirmed against the County Court’s e-filing guidelines and any practice notes issued for your division.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Originating process (Statement of Claim or Originating Motion) | Filed by the claimant. Must conform to the current County Court prescribed form and designate the division (Common Law or Commercial). Check for any updated rule-specific checklist box introduced by the 2026 amendments. |
| Defence / Response | Filed by the defendant. Must address each allegation point-by-point. Note any new rule wording on the specificity of particulars required. |
| Affidavit of Service | Filed by the serving party. Must specify method, date, time and place of service. Attach proof (courier consignment note, email delivery receipt or postal tracking). |
| List of documents / initial disclosure schedule | Filed by each party within the disclosure window. Documents listed chronologically with sufficient description. Indicate where confidentiality or privilege is claimed on a separate schedule. |
| Interlocutory application affidavit(s) and written submissions | Filed by the applicant. Include evidence of urgency and evidence that attempts were made to notify the other party. The amended Rules specify the minimum notice period. |
| Case management statement | Filed jointly or separately as directed. Include an estimate of trial length, identification of key issues and any ADR proposals. |
| Draft index of authorities and draft chronology | For trial readiness. Prepare as PDF bundles with pagination and bookmarks. Follow any practice note on electronic trial bundles. |
| Proposed redactions and confidentiality affidavits | Required only where sensitive material is in evidence. Set out the statutory or common-law ground for the claim. File with the list of documents or by separate application. |
| Costs estimate / bill of costs | For parties intending to seek costs orders. Include professional fees, disbursements and GST. May be filed at the conclusion of the proceeding or earlier if directed. |
Confirm you have the current version of each form before filing. The County Court publishes prescribed forms on its official forms and fees page. Key forms to verify include:
Check the County Court of Victoria’s forms and fees page for the most current versions and any new forms introduced with the 13 July 2026 amendments.
The table above sets out the standard procedural timeline. Two practical calendar scenarios illustrate how the amended interlocutory timelines apply:
Scenario A, New claim filed 14 July 2026. The originating process is filed on Day 0 (14 July 2026) under the amended Rules. Service must be effected promptly, within 7 to 14 days. If served on 21 July 2026, the defendant’s deadline to file a Defence falls approximately 21 to 28 days later (around 11–18 August 2026). Initial disclosure is due within 28 days of the close of pleadings. A first case management conference would typically be listed 6 to 12 weeks after close of pleadings.
Scenario B, Ongoing matter with a directions hearing on 20 July 2026. The transitional provisions in the remaking instrument determine which version of the Rules applies to steps not yet completed. The likely practical effect is that any interlocutory step ordered on or after 13 July 2026, including disclosure timetables or amended notice periods, will follow the new rule wording. Steps already completed before 13 July 2026 are preserved under the former provisions. Parties should review their existing court orders and compare them against the amended timeframes. If a conflict arises, seek a directions hearing to clarify the applicable timetable.
The amended disclosure requirements may tighten the initial disclosure window. Early indications suggest that the 2026 amendments reinforce a 28-day standard window from close of pleadings, with limited scope for extensions absent a substantive application. Interlocutory application notice periods may also be adjusted, practitioners should confirm the minimum notice days in the amended rules before filing any interlocutory summons.
County Court filing and hearing fees are set by regulation and were updated effective 1 July 2026. The table below provides indicative figures, verify exact amounts on the County Court fees and costs page before lodging any filing.
| Item | Amount (indicative) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Filing fee, civil originating process | Verify on County Court fees page | Effective 1 July 2026. Amount varies by claim type, check the fee schedule for the applicable category. |
| Hearing listing fee / interlocutory application fee | Verify on County Court fees page | Separate fees may apply for contested interlocutory hearings. Confirm whether a hearing fee is payable on filing or on listing. |
| Ready-for-trial listing fee | Verify on County Court fees page | Payable when a matter is certified as ready for trial. Check practice directions for timing. |
| Typical solicitor estimate, interlocutory application | $2,000–$7,500 (indicative, inclusive of GST) | Varies significantly by complexity, number of affidavits and whether counsel is briefed. GST of 10% applies to legal services in Australia. |
| Typical solicitor estimate, defended trial (1–3 days) | $15,000–$60,000 (indicative, inclusive of GST) | Depends on discovery volume, expert evidence, counsel briefed and trial length. Obtain a fixed-fee or capped-fee estimate before trial. |
All legal fees in Australia are subject to GST at 10%. Solicitors must provide a costs disclosure at the outset of the retainer and update it if the estimate materially changes. Parties seeking to recover legal costs from the opposing party should note that the Court assesses costs on a standard or indemnity basis, the 2026 amendments do not change the costs assessment framework but reinforce the Court’s power to make adverse costs orders for non-compliance with procedural obligations.
The amendments to the County Court Civil Procedure Rules 2018 commencing on 13 July 2026 are made under the remaking and amendment process authorised by the County Court Act 1958 (Vic). The amended provisions appear in Chapter I (general procedural rules including service, notice, time computation and interlocutory practice) and Chapter II (disclosure, interrogatories and related obligations). The full text of the amended County Court rules 2026 is published on the Victorian Legislation website.
Key areas of practical impact include:
Transitional provisions: The remaking instrument includes transitional and savings provisions. The likely practical effect is that procedural steps not yet completed as at 13 July 2026, even in proceedings commenced before that date, will be governed by the new rules. Steps already validly taken under the old rules are preserved. Practitioners with ongoing matters should review the commencement and transitional provisions in the statutory instrument published on the Victorian Legislation website.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Peter Obrien at OBrien Solicitors, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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