Suing a Dry Cleaner in Georgia: Small-Claims Limit, Time Limit & How to File
Last reviewed · Editorial team
When a dry cleaner in Georgia loses or ruins clothes and won't pay a fair amount, small-claims court is one option many people turn to. This page explains Georgia's dollar limit, how the filing deadline works, and the general process — with links to the official sources to confirm the details.
| Small-claims limit | $15,000 |
|---|---|
| Court that hears it | Magistrate Court |
| Consumer-protection law | Georgia Fair Business Practices Act O.C.G.A. § 10-1-390 et seq. |
| Official court site | georgiacourts.gov |
Reviewed June 10, 2026. Small-claims limits change and can vary by court or county — confirm the current figure and filing rules on Georgia's official court website before you file.
Georgia's small-claims limit and which court hears your case
Small-claims court lets you sue for money without a lawyer, using simple forms and a short hearing. In Georgia, these cases are generally heard by the Magistrate Court, with a limit of about $15,000.
If your loss is larger than the small-claims limit, you can still sue — but you'd use a higher civil court (often with more formal procedures), or you can choose to waive the amount above the limit to stay in small claims. Confirm Georgia's current limit and filing fees on the official court website.
How long there is to sue in Georgia
Every claim has a statute of limitations — a deadline to file. A dry-cleaner dispute can usually be framed as breach of a bailment, breach of contract, or property damage, and each can carry a different deadline. Because these deadlines vary by state and claim type — and because missing one can permanently end a case — the applicable Georgia deadline is worth confirming early, through the official state code or a licensed Georgia attorney.
Your rights under Georgia law
When you hand clothes to a cleaner, you create a bailment: you still own the clothes, and the cleaner must take reasonable care of them and return them. If they lose or damage your garment through carelessness, they're generally responsible — and in many states the burden shifts to the cleaner to show they weren't careless once you prove you handed over an intact item.
Georgia also has a consumer-protection law — the Georgia Fair Business Practices Act that bars unfair or deceptive business practices and can, in some cases, add remedies such as attorney's fees. Whether it applies to a particular dry-cleaning dispute depends on the facts. Most states have no dry-cleaner-specific statute, so these general bailment and consumer-protection rules are usually what govern. For how the statute applies to your situation, consider speaking with a Georgia attorney.
How the small-claims process generally works in Georgia
A small-claims case in Georgia typically involves these stages:
- Gathering the evidence — the claim ticket/receipt, photos, proof of what was paid, and the messages with the cleaner.
- Putting the claim in writing — a demand letter with a specific amount and a deadline is a common first step.
- Identifying the right Magistrate Court (usually where the cleaner does business) and obtaining the forms from the official court site.
- Filing the claim, paying the filing fee, and arranging to formally "serve" the business.
- Preparing for the hearing — including the damaged garment and organized evidence.
The exact forms, fees, and rules are set by Georgia's courts; the official court site has the specifics.
Other ways people raise a dry-cleaning complaint in Georgia
A complaint generally won't pay you directly, but it can add pressure and create a record. Common options include the state attorney general / consumer-protection office, the Better Business Bureau, and the FTC for deceptive practices. The official sources below can help locate Georgia's consumer office.
Frequently asked questions
What is the small-claims limit in Georgia?
Which court hears a dry-cleaning dispute in Georgia?
Does the Georgia Fair Business Practices Act apply to a dry-cleaning dispute?
Do I need a lawyer to sue a dry cleaner in Georgia?
How long is there to sue a dry cleaner in Georgia?
Before you file
Small-claims court is built for exactly this: a clear dispute over a few hundred or few thousand dollars, no lawyer required. Here's how to use it against a dry cleaner.
A clear written demand is the single most effective free step you can take. It signals you know your rights, names a number, and creates the record you'll use if this reaches a judge.
You're generally owed your garment's fair market value at the time of loss — its replacement cost reduced for age and wear. For nearly-new items, that's close to what you paid.
Small-claims rules in nearby states
Sources
- Georgia official court website
- Find your state consumer protection office (USA.gov)
- Report fraud or a deceptive business (FTC)
We cite official government and primary sources wherever possible. Found something out of date? Let us know.