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Aviso legal: Esto no constituye asesoramiento jurídico. La legislación y la jurisprudencia cambian. Consulte siempre con un abogado cualificado para su situación específica.

UK Law Reference
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N244
Civil
England & Wales
Reviewed 2026-01-15

N244Application Notice

Used to apply to the court for an order during ongoing proceedings — for example, to adjourn a hearing, seek an interim injunction, or vary directions.

Who uses this form

Any party to existing civil proceedings who needs a court order or direction before or during trial. Commonly used by claimants and defendants in contested litigation.

When to use it

File an N244 when you need the court to make an interim order: extending time, relief from sanctions, summary judgment, strike out, interim injunctions, or costs orders. Also used for standalone applications where no claim is yet issued (e.g. pre-action disclosure).

Where to file

The court dealing with the proceedings. If no proceedings issued yet, file at the appropriate court. Most applications require a hearing date to be allocated.

Court fee

£119 with a hearing; £119 without a hearing (on the papers); £59 consent orders; some applications are free (e.g. relief from sanctions in small claims)

Fee remission

Help with Fees (EX160) is available. The application fee may be waived for those on qualifying benefits.

Common mistakes to avoid

Not drafting and attaching a proposed draft order — judges expect to see the exact wording you want

Failing to serve the application notice on the other party at least 3 clear days before the hearing

Not including a witness statement or evidence in support where the application is contested

Ticking the wrong box for 'without notice' — this is only appropriate in urgent/injunction cases

Not paying the correct fee or attaching the EX160 remission form

Related Guides

Related Letter Templates

Official source

Download / view form on GOV.UK or HMCTS

Always download forms directly from official government sources. Third-party copies may be outdated.