Methodology
Pew captured information from court statistical reports and dashboards in 2013, 2018, 2021, and 2022: which courts heard debt collection lawsuits, whether these courts had limited (smaller dollar) or general (larger dollar) jurisdiction, how debt collection was labelled (e.g., collection of accounts, debt/contract), the number of debt collection filings, how landlord-tenant cases were labelled (e.g., unlawful detainer, eviction), the number of landlord-tenant cases, the number of traffic cases, the number of small claims cases, and the total number of filings in the court where debt cases were heard. As of June 2023, only a handful of states had reported 2022 data; as a result, Pew excluded that year from the analysis.
The figures reflect only the percentage of debt claims cases filed in courts that reported those numbers publicly. Because some states had data for courts of limited and/or general jurisdiction and others had information for just one court, and because some states reported by fiscal year and others by calendar year, these figures should not be understood to represent apples-to-apples comparisons. To help address these limitations, Pew took steps to make these states comparable by removing cases related to probate, family (including abuse-related protective orders), criminal matters, traffic, and administrative cases from the total number of civil cases. While often thought of as a civil matter, Pew excluded family matters from this analysis because it can be difficult to characterize family cases through filings because they can stay open for many years (e.g., a parenting time case may remain open for 18 years) and including these cases can be an inaccurate reflection of the docket. Further, domestic relations cases often follow a separate set of procedures than other civil matters, which usually follow the general rules of civil procedure in a given jurisdiction. Excluding family matters aligns with how the Court Statistics Project, National Open Data Standards, and many state statistical reports present their data. Finally, these figures do not count small claims cases, with the exception of cases in states in which business-to-consumer cases were clearly identified in small claims case counts.