How to Respond to a Debt Lawsuit in New York
General information only — not legal advice. Debt Clarity is a document preparation service, not a law firm. Court rules and deadlines change and can differ by court and case type. The deadline printed on your summons always controls — read it carefully and verify with the court named on your papers.
Served in New York? Here’s the Big Picture
If you’ve received a summons and complaint over a debt in New York, a lawsuit has been filed against you and a response clock is already running. Nationally, more than 70% of debt lawsuits end in default judgment — an automatic win for the collector — simply because the person sued never responded. Responding on time is how you keep your options open.
Your Deadline in New York
In New York the window is commonly 20 days if you were served in person and 30 days if served another way — and in some courts it can be as short as 10 days. The summons states which applies to you.
Whatever the general rule, the deadline printed on your summons controls. Read it carefully, note how you were served, and mark the date.
Which Court Is Handling Your Case
Debt cases in New York are typically heard in the City, District, or Supreme Court depending on the county and amount. The exact court, its address, and your case number appear at the top of your papers — you’ll need all three for anything you file. Most courts publish self-help instructions for defendants on their websites.
Your Main Options
- Respond to the lawsuit. Filing the response your court requires — in most New York debt cases, a written Answer or an appearance on the date your papers set — keeps you in the case and preserves your right to be heard.
- Try to resolve it. Some people contact the plaintiff or its attorney about payment or settlement. Talks do not pause the court’s clock, so many people respond first and negotiate second.
- Do nothing. The predictable ending: a default judgment, which under New York law can open the door to collection tools such as wage garnishment, bank levies, or liens.
How to Respond, Step by Step
The full process — reading the complaint, understanding the numbered allegations, what an Answer contains, filing, and serving the other side — is covered in our step-by-step guide: How to Respond to a Debt Lawsuit. If a debt buyer like Midland, Portfolio Recovery, or LVNV is the one suing you, see Sued by a Debt Collector? What Happens Next.
Want It Prepared for You — by Real People?
If you’ve decided to respond and don’t want to battle DIY software or formatting rules alone, that’s what we do all day. A real person takes your information by phone or secure form, prepares your court-ready documents to your instructions, and walks you through what to do next — for one flat fee quoted upfront.
Book a free consultation, request a free quote, or call (855) 394-2484. We help self-represented consumers in all 50 states.