How long do you have to answer a lawsuit in North Carolina?

Your deadline to respond after being served a summons in North Carolina, by court. The single controlling deadline is the date on your actual summons. General information, not legal advice.

General / district court30 days
Limited / small-claims (most debt suits)Small Claims (Magistrate): no written answer — APPEAR at the trial date on the summons
How days are countedcalendar days

North Carolina note: In small claims you don't file an Answer — you show up on the assigned court date. Source: N.C. Gen. Stat. §1A-1, Rule 12(a)(1).

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What to do if you were served in North Carolina

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FAQ

How long do I have to respond to a court summons in North Carolina?

In North Carolina the general trial-court deadline to file an Answer is 30 days. But most debt lawsuits are filed in the limited/small-claims court, where it is: Small Claims (Magistrate): no written answer — APPEAR at the trial date on the summons. The single controlling deadline is the date printed on your served summons.

What happens if I ignore a lawsuit in North Carolina?

If you miss the deadline the court can enter a default judgment against you — the plaintiff wins automatically and can garnish wages or levy bank accounts. Responding on time preserves your defenses and forces the plaintiff to prove the debt.

Is a "summons" by phone or email a real lawsuit in North Carolina?

No. A real lawsuit arrives as physical court papers with a court name and a case/docket number. A phone call, text, or email demanding payment to "avoid arrest" is a scam — you are never arrested for a consumer debt.