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UK Law Reference
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Civil Procedure
Updated 2026-05-16

N1 Paper Claim vs Money Claim Online (MCOL)

Choosing between the N1 paper claim form and the Money Claim Online service for starting a civil money claim in England and Wales.

Overview

When starting a money claim in England and Wales, claimants can file an N1 claim form at a County Court hearing centre or use the HMCTS Money Claim Online (MCOL) web portal. Both routes issue a claim in the County Court, but they differ in eligibility, cost, speed, and suitability. MCOL was introduced to streamline straightforward debt and money claims, while the paper N1 form remains the only option for complex, multi-defendant, or Part 8 matters. From April 2025, the Online Civil Money Claims (OCMC) service has been progressively replacing the older MCOL portal for claims under £25,000, but the underlying procedural rules remain the same. The choice of route affects not only how you issue but also how quickly service is effected and when the defendant must respond.

Side-by-Side Comparison

N1 Paper Claim Form

Cost: £35 (up to £300 claim) to £10,000 maximum fee (5% of value for claims £5,000–£200,000; fixed fees above £200,000) — see Civil Proceedings Fees Order 2008 (as amended)
Time: Issue in 5–15 working days at CCBC; service effected by court within a further 4 working days or by claimant

Pros

  • No upper limit on claim value — suitable for high-value claims
  • Flexible — can accommodate complex particulars of claim, multiple defendants, and ancillary relief
  • Can be combined with an application for interim injunction or other Part 23 application
  • Allows Part 8 procedure where there is no substantial dispute of fact

Cons

  • Slower issue — processing time at CCBC can take 5–15 working days
  • Higher court fee for large claims (5% of value above £5,000 up to a capped maximum of £10,000)
  • Paper-based: tracking requires contacting the court; no online case management

Best For

Complex claims, claims over £100,000, multi-defendant actions, claims requiring ancillary relief or injunctions, and claims with lengthy particulars.

Money Claim Online (MCOL / OCMC)

Cost: Court fees apply at a 10% discount vs paper; same fee scale but reduced online
Time: Claim issued same day; defendant has 14 days to acknowledge, 28 days to defend from service

Pros

  • Fast — claim issued on the day of submission; automated service by first-class post
  • 10% discount on court fees compared to paper
  • Online case management — claimant can monitor progress, request judgment in default, and enforce online
  • Accessible 24/7 — no need to attend a court office or post a form

Cons

  • Capped at £100,000 — unsuitable for higher-value claims
  • Limited to two defendants with addresses in England and Wales; no foreign defendants
  • Cannot be used for Part 8 claims, possession claims, or claims requiring ancillary relief
  • Particulars of claim are limited to 1,080 characters — unsuitable for complex claims

Best For

Straightforward debt and money claims of up to £100,000 against one or two defendants in England and Wales, particularly consumer credit, unpaid invoices, and loan recovery.

Key Differences

AspectN1 Paper Claim FormMoney Claim Online (MCOL / OCMC)
Maximum claim valueUnlimited£100,000
Issue speed5–15 working days at CCBCSame day (automated)
Court feeStandard scale (Civil Proceedings Fees Order 2008)10% reduction vs paper
Number of defendantsUnlimitedMaximum 2 defendants with England and Wales addresses
Complex particularsNo limit on length of particulars of claimCapped at 1,080 characters
Ancillary applicationsCan accompany injunction or other Part 23 applicationNot available
Case trackingPaper-based; telephone or written enquiries to courtOnline dashboard with real-time status

Our Recommendation

Use MCOL (or OCMC) for straightforward money claims up to £100,000 against one or two defendants — the fee discount, speed, and online tracking make it the better default. File a paper N1 where the claim exceeds £100,000, involves more than two defendants, requires lengthy particulars, or needs to be combined with an injunction application.