Court Fees, Filing Costs, and Fee Waivers in South Carolina
Access to South Carolina's court system carries direct financial obligations — filing fees, service costs, and administrative charges that vary by court level, case type, and requested relief. Understanding these costs matters because unpaid fees can halt a case, result in dismissal, or block record access. This page covers the structure of court filing costs across South Carolina's court tiers, the statutory waiver mechanism for qualifying low-income litigants, and the boundaries separating fee-eligible from fee-exempt proceedings.
Definition and scope
Court fees in South Carolina are statutory charges collected by the clerk of court at the time a document is filed or a service is requested. They are distinct from attorney fees, costs awarded to prevailing parties, and fines imposed as criminal penalties. Filing fees fund court operations and are set primarily by the South Carolina General Assembly under Title 8 and Title 14 of the South Carolina Code of Laws.
Three broad categories of court costs apply across the state:
- Filing fees — Charged when initiating or responding to civil actions, family court petitions, probate filings, and similar proceedings. The amount depends on the court division and the relief sought.
- Service fees — Costs associated with serving process on opposing parties, including sheriff service and certified mail charges administered through the clerk's office.
- Miscellaneous administrative fees — Charges for certified copies, transcripts, docket searches, and record retrieval governed by S.C. Code Ann. § 8-21-310.
The South Carolina Judicial Department (SCJD) maintains the official schedule of fees for state courts. Federal courts operating within South Carolina's borders — the U.S. District Court for the District of South Carolina — maintain a separate fee schedule issued under the Judicial Conference of the United States and fall outside this page's scope.
For an orientation to the broader court hierarchy, see How the South Carolina Legal System Works.
How it works
Fee schedules by court level
Fee amounts are not uniform across court divisions. South Carolina's tiered court structure produces distinct fee obligations at each level:
- Magistrate Court: Civil filing fees for claims up to the jurisdictional limit (set at $7,500 for most magistrate civil matters under S.C. Code Ann. § 22-3-10) are lower than circuit-level fees. Small claims filings within magistrate court carry a filing fee of approximately $80 for claims up to $7,500, though clerks should be consulted for current figures since the General Assembly adjusts amounts by statute. For more detail on magistrate-level procedure, see South Carolina Magistrate Court Overview.
- Circuit Court (Court of Common Pleas): Civil complaints filed in the Court of Common Pleas — the primary trial court for civil matters — carry a filing fee that scales with the amount in controversy. Under S.C. Code Ann. § 8-21-310, the base filing fee for civil actions not otherwise specified is $150. Actions seeking more than $25,000 in damages carry higher fees. For an overview of circuit-level operations, see South Carolina Circuit Court Operations.
- Family Court: Petitions for divorce, custody modification, adoption, and domestic abuse orders each carry distinct fee structures. A divorce filing fee under South Carolina practice is approximately $150 for the complaint, with additional fees for motions and hearings. South Carolina Family Court Jurisdiction covers this court's full authority.
- Probate Court: Estate filing fees in probate court are assessed based on the gross value of the estate. South Carolina Probate Court Roles details how those proceedings are structured.
- Appellate Courts: Filing a notice of appeal in the South Carolina Court of Appeals carries a $225 fee under the SCJD schedule; Supreme Court original jurisdiction matters carry separate charges.
The fee waiver process
South Carolina provides a statutory mechanism — the Application to Proceed In Forma Pauperis (IFP) — for litigants who cannot afford filing fees. The process is governed by S.C. Code Ann. § 15-7-50 and Rule 3(b) of the South Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure.
The steps for obtaining a fee waiver are:
- Complete the IFP application — The applicant submits a sworn financial affidavit to the clerk of court showing income, assets, and household expenses.
- Judicial review — A judge or magistrate reviews the affidavit; approval is not automatic. The court may deny the application if it finds the claim frivolous under Rule 11, SCRCP.
- Conditional grant — If approved, the court defers or waives filing fees. If the litigant later obtains a monetary judgment, the court may require fee repayment from that recovery.
- Denial and appeal — A denied IFP application can be challenged by motion before the same court or, in limited circumstances, on interlocutory review.
The South Carolina Legal Aid and Access to Justice page addresses additional support structures for low-income litigants navigating these procedures.
Common scenarios
Scenario A: Pro se civil plaintiff in Circuit Court
A self-represented plaintiff filing a breach of contract claim for $30,000 in the Court of Common Pleas pays the standard civil filing fee at the time of filing. If the plaintiff meets the income threshold — generally gross income at or below 125% of the federal poverty guidelines as applied by local courts — an IFP application may eliminate that upfront cost. South Carolina Pro Se Litigant Guidance and South Carolina Legal Document Filing Procedures outline the procedural requirements for self-represented parties. Contract law fundamentals relevant to the underlying claim appear at South Carolina Contract Law Basics.
Scenario B: Domestic violence protective order
Petitions for Orders of Protection under the South Carolina Protection from Domestic Abuse Act, S.C. Code Ann. § 20-4-10 et seq., are explicitly fee-exempt for the petitioner. The statute prohibits clerks from collecting a filing fee from a person seeking a protective order, creating an absolute waiver independent of financial qualification. This exemption does not extend to the respondent's counter-filings or subsequent modification motions not tied to the protective order itself.
Scenario C: Criminal defendant and court costs
Criminal defendants face a different cost structure than civil litigants. In South Carolina criminal proceedings, defendants do not pay filing fees to initiate prosecution — the State bears that cost. However, upon conviction, defendants are assessed mandatory court costs and surcharges under S.C. Code Ann. § 14-1-206 through § 14-1-211. These post-conviction assessments include a $25 victim's compensation fund assessment (for misdemeanors) and higher surcharges for felony convictions, stacked with state general fund assessments. The South Carolina Criminal Procedure Overview page covers the broader procedural context.
Scenario D: Small claims in Magistrate Court
Small claims filings — a subset of magistrate civil practice — carry reduced fees compared to circuit-level litigation. The South Carolina Small Claims Process page details the filing thresholds and procedural rules that distinguish small claims from general civil magistrate actions.
Decision boundaries
Fee waiver eligibility vs. fee exemption by statute
These two categories operate differently and are frequently confused:
| Characteristic | IFP Fee Waiver | Statutory Exemption |
|---|---|---|
| Basis | Financial hardship, judicially determined | Case type defined by statute |
| Application required | Yes — sworn affidavit | No — automatic at filing |
| Court discretion | Yes — judge may deny | No — mandatory |
| Examples | General civil, family court petitions | Domestic violence petitions, certain habeas matters |
| Repayment possible | Yes — if judgment obtained | No |
Scope, coverage, and limitations
This page addresses fees and waivers applicable to South Carolina state courts administered under the South Carolina Judicial Department. The following fall outside this page's scope:
- Federal court fees: The U.S. District Court for the District of South Carolina follows the Judicial Conference fee schedule, not state statutes. Federal IFP procedures are governed by 28 U.S.C. § 1915, not S.C. Code Ann. § 15-7-50. See South Carolina Federal Courts in State for context on the federal court presence in South Carolina.
- Administrative agency fees: Fees charged by South Carolina administrative tribunals — such as the Administrative Law Court — are set by agency rule, not the SCJD schedule. South Carolina Administrative Law Agencies addresses that structure.
- Attorney fees and litigation costs: Awards of attorney fees to prevailing parties under fee-shifting statutes are a separate legal doctrine not addressed here.
- Fines and criminal monetary penalties: Post-conviction surcharges are criminal penalties, not filing fees, and their collection and remission are governed by separate statutory frameworks.
- Other states' courts: