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Identify the order, date received, deadline, permission issue and exact remedy sought.
For SGD 2 million at stake, unclear grounds can weaken an otherwise serious appeal.
Appeals usually depend on the record, not a fresh telling of the whole dispute.
Use Caira to organise the decision, evidence bundle and draft grounds checklist.
The Small Claims Tribunals can be a practical route for some low-value disputes in Singapore, but the workflow is not just a form-filling exercise. Before you start in CJTS, check whether the dispute fits the official eligibility rules, whether you are naming the correct respondent, and whether your evidence supports the remedy you are asking for. A tidy claim with the wrong party or unsupported amount can still run into trouble.
Who this guide is for
This article is for people preparing a Singapore small claim involving a consumer contract, service dispute, or residential tenancy dispute, including rental deposit issues where the tenancy falls within the official Small Claims Tribunals scope. It is not a promise that every landlord, employer, freelancer, contractor, or neighbour dispute belongs in the SCT. Employment salary disputes, criminal complaints, harassment issues, and higher-value or more complex civil claims may need a different route.
Start with the Singapore Courts pages on small claims, eligible cases, and how to file and serve a claim.
Step 1: confirm eligibility before drafting
Do this before you spend time improving your explanation. Check the claim type, amount, time limits, and any residential-tenancy duration requirement on the official Courts page. The official materials highlight the ordinary S$20,000 claim limit and the S$30,000 route where there is a Memorandum of Consent, plus residential tenancy agreements not exceeding the relevant duration threshold. These are not decorative details. They affect whether the tribunal can hear the claim at all.
Step 2: identify the correct claimant and respondent
Use the legal names that match the contract, invoice, tenancy agreement, receipt, or business record. In a rental deposit dispute, the loudest person in the WhatsApp group may be the agent, housemate, or property manager rather than the landlord who received the deposit. In a consumer dispute, the trading name on a receipt may differ from the registered entity. Keep notes showing how you identified the respondent. If you cannot serve the respondent because the name or address is wrong, the claim may stall even if the facts feel strong.
Step 3: define the remedy in plain numbers
Be clear about what you want. If you seek money, show the calculation: deposit paid, amount returned, deductions disputed, outstanding balance, filing fee if relevant, or invoice amount unpaid. If part of the deduction is accepted, say so. A claim for everything because you are angry is weaker than a focused claim for the specific balance you can prove. If you are asking for replacement, repair, refund, or another remedy, check the official rules and describe the practical order you want in direct terms.
Step 4: organise evidence before using CJTS
Create a short evidence folder before filing. For tenancy disputes, include the tenancy agreement, deposit receipt, bank transfer, stamp certificate if available, move-in and move-out photos, inventory, key-return proof, utility bills, deduction breakdown, invoices, and messages. For consumer or service disputes, include quotation, invoice, payment proof, delivery record, photos, warranty terms, cancellation messages, and attempts to resolve the matter. Label files by date and topic. A file named 2026-04-20 move-out photos is more useful than IMG_4837.
Step 5: write a claim summary that a stranger can follow
The summary should not read like a long argument thread. Use a simple sequence: who the parties are, what agreement was made, what was paid, what went wrong, what you asked the other side to do, what response you received, and what order you are asking for. Avoid insults and unsupported legal conclusions. Instead of saying the respondent cheated me, write that the respondent received S$[amount] on [date], did not deliver [item/service], and has not refunded the payment despite your written request on [date].
Step 6: pay attention to service
Filing is not the end. The official Courts workflow includes service steps, and the respondent needs proper notice. Keep proof of service and any communication after service. If the respondent offers settlement, record the terms clearly: amount, due date, payment method, whether the claim will be withdrawn only after cleared payment, and what happens if payment is missed. Do not delete messages after filing because later steps may depend on what was said.
Useful bilingual labels
If your documents include Chinese-speaking parties, labels can help you sort evidence without turning the article into a Chinese template: 小额索赔 for small claim, 申索人 for claimant, 答辩人 for respondent, 租赁协议 for tenancy agreement, 押金 for deposit, 证据 for evidence, and 送达 for service. Use the official English terms when completing an English workflow unless the system asks otherwise.
Common mistakes
Do not file before checking eligibility. Do not name the agent automatically. Do not claim a deposit balance without showing the deposit payment and move-out record. Do not upload one giant screenshot collage when separate dated files would be clearer. Do not mix a money claim with demands the tribunal cannot order. Do not assume that winning an order can help instant payment; enforcement may be a separate practical question if the other side does not comply.
Where Unwildered fits
Upload the contract, receipts, photos, messages, invoice, deduction list, and draft claim summary. Unwildered can help convert messy evidence into a chronology, party list, amount table, and pre-filing checklist before you use the official CJTS workflow.
This article is general information, not legal, financial, medical or tax advice.
