E-Filing FAQs
Basic Electronic Filing Questions
Electronic filing or e-filing enables filers and courts to efficiently process documents and fees online. eFileCA manages the flow of information among filers, clerks, court personnel and judges.
The filer submits documents by establishing an account with an electronic service provider (EFSP) at http://www.odysseyefileca.com/service-providers.htm .
Yes. The eFileCA system adheres to state and federal security regulations and meets Payment Card Industry Security Standards to protect filer and transaction information.
It varies by court. Please review the list of Courts accepting e-filings section at http://www.odysseyeFileCA.com for information on specific courts.
Specific case types Santa Clara Superior Court can be viewed at the Electronic Filing (E-filing) page on the Court’s website.
See Santa Clara Superior Court Local General Rule 6 .
eFileCA is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Consult your local court rules for the court review timelines and schedules.
Santa Clara Superior Court accepts filings during normal business hours, 8-5 Monday through Friday excluding court holidays, see Local General Rule 6. Note: The system may be temporarily offline from time to time for maintenance purposes.
Yes, self-represented parties are eligible to use the site for e-filing. However, it is not mandatory they do so.
Yes, all users must register with an electronic service provider (EFSP) prior to using e-filing.
Yes, support is provided for both attorneys and self-represented litigants. Each electronic filing service provider (EFSP) offers a different type of e-filing support. When you pick your EFSP look at the level of filing support that is offered and see if it meets your needs.
Yes, training is provided for free. You can register by selecting Web Training Sessions at https://california.tylerhost.net/OFSWEB or contact your electronic service provider (EFSP). You can attend as many training sessions as you need. One hour of CLE credit can be earned for many of the sessions.
The filing must be received by the court by 5 p.m., as indicated in Local Rule 6. Keep in mind that some of the EFSP companies have a cut off earlier than 5 p.m. for same day processing because of the time it takes for the envelope to be submitted and received by the court. If a person hits submit on their computer at 4:55pm it may not be received by the court until 5:01pm which would make it a next day filing.
All documents can be electronically filed except for those outlined in Santa Clara Superior Court Local General Rule 6 on the Court’s website.
See Santa Clara Superior Court Local General Rule 6 , and the Electronic Filing (E-filing) page on the Court’s website.
Electronic Service
E-service is a feature provided by eFileCA where documents are electronically served to other parties in a case via e-mail. Using this option, you can track when each party received and opened the filing.
Filers are responsible for accomplishing service of all filings as required by applicable court rules. For this purpose, filers may use the mail service, serve by hand delivery, send an e-mail, or use eFileCA as it offers the option of electronic service of each filing to the designated service contact.
Yes, eFileCA may be used to exchange documents between parties without filing the documents through the courts.
Electronic Filing Fees
Yes, there are fees associated with filing documents electronically with eFIleCA.com.
Standard court filing fees: Statewide fee schedules can be found at http://www.scscourt.org/forms_and_filing/fees.shtml. Contact your local court for additional information on specific filing fees.
Filings submitted without all the required filing fees, will be rejected for correction.
E-file fee: A service fee is assessed for use of the e-filing system. The fee is up to$5.00. This is subject to change.
Payment service fee: A payment service fee is assessed to cover the credit card processing fees. The current fee is 3%, this number can fluctuate quarterly.
eCheck Fee: The fee is $1.00.
Yes. Filings submitted electronically will be rejected if they are submitted without all the required filing fees. This includes the $30 court reporter fee required in Civil and Probate cases for any hearing initiated by a party such as a civil motion or probate petition (this does not apply to Family Law matters). For additional information on the court reporter fee please see Government Code 68086(a).
In accordance with rule 2.253 of the California Rules of Court, a party may submit an application for exemption from eFiling.
Adding New Parties
When electronically filing into an existing case, parties that already exist in the case should not be added as new parties. The only time new parties should be added to the case is when the filing adds new parties to an existing case. This could be an amended complaint adding new defendants, cross complaint adding cross-defendants, amendment to complaint naming a doe, etc. When new parties are added through electronic filing that already exist on the case the clerk has to delete them before processing the filing or the parties will be duplicated in the case management system.
Documents
Documents should be filed as you would have at the clerk window. For instance a document that would have been stapled together at filing should be filed as one lead document. Another way to think about it as anything that needs its own file stamp should be filed separately, as a lead document that gets its own separate event code. Multiple documents can be filed together in one envelope but each document to be filed needs its own event code.
35 megabits for the whole envelope and 25 megabits for a single document. There have been a few initial problems here that have all been resolved by calling the EFSP. If the document is truly too big, and the EFSP cannot resolve, the document can be electronically filed in separate batches but please call the court to let us know that this is going to happen first so we can monitor and filings are not rejected in error.
PDF, however some EFSPs allow you to file as a Word document because they then turn it into a PDF for you.
Yes, pursuant to California Rule of Court 3.1110(f), a document filed electronically with exhibits must include electronic bookmarks with links to the first page of each exhibit and a bookmark title that identifies the exhibit number or letter and briefly describes the exhibit.
Yes, pursuant to California Rule of Court 2.256(b)(3), a document filed electronically must be text searchable.
For assistance you can contact the filer support number for the electronic service provider you are using.