Once you have decided to start a claim, and have got the bulk of your evidence together, you need to check if there is a pre-action protocol for your type of case.
A pre-action protocol describes the procedure the court expects you to follow before you formally start a case. It gives details about how to behave and what to do. There are specific pre-action protocols for many types of case. If your type of claim is not covered by a specific pre-action protocol you need to follow the practice direction on pre-action conduct (see below).
The court will expect you to follow the relevant pre-action protocol if you start proceedings after the date that it came into force.
Essentially, this is a ‘cards on the table’ approach. The aim is to encourage early and full information exchange so each side can:
Currently there are pre-action protocols for claims about:
- debt (where the claimant is a business claiming money from an individual),
- package travel claims,
- personal injury (where the total claim is likely to be allocated to the fast-track (for example, because it is worth under £25,000) and where other relevant pre-action protocol in relation to personal injury, disease and illness or clinical negligence does not apply),
- low value personal injury (employer’s liability and public liability) - this is where the total claim is worth under £25,000 but the personal injury element is worth over £1,500 if the case was started after 6th April 2022,
- low value personal injury in road traffic accidents that occurred before 31st May 2021 - this is where the total value is under £25,000 but the personal injury element is under £1,000,
- low value personal injury in road traffic accidents that occurred on or after 31st May 2021 where the total value is under £10,000 but the personal injury element is under £5,000,
- disease and illness,
- clinical negligence,
- media and communications (claims to do with print or broadcast media, social media, websites, or speech, including defamation),
- construction and engineering,
- professional negligence,
- judicial review,
- housing disrepair (whatever the value),
- possession claims based on rent arrears,
- possession claims based on mortgage or home purchase plan arrears in respect of residential property, and
- claims for damages in relation to the physical state of commercial property at termination of a tenancy.
You can find them at Civil Procedure Rules - Pre-Action Protocols.
The aim of a pre-action protocol is to improve communication between you and the defendant so you both get enough information to decide how likely it is that the case will succeed, and how much the case is worth. As a result, the two of you may become more willing to try and reach an agreement about the dispute (also known as settling a dispute or reaching a settlement) without you needing to start a civil claim. If you decide to start a court case after you have followed the relevant pre-action protocol, you should be in a better-informed position.
Small claims are dealt with by the pre-action protocol for each type of claim. For instance, the Package Travel protocol applies to claims about package holidays valued at no more than £25,000. So, if your claim falls within the limit for a small claim (£10,000 or less) and is about package travel then the Package Travel protocol would apply.
The extent to which you have followed the rules on pre-action conduct will be considered by the court in relation to any court proceedings which follow. For example, the court may order you to pay additional costs resulting from your failure to follow the protocol if you lose the case. Or, if you win your case and are awarded costs by the court, the amount the other side is ordered to pay you may be reduced. (See Failing to follow a pre-action protocol or the rules about pre-action conduct for more on this).
If a specific pre-action protocol applies to your case
Where a specific pre-action protocol applies to your type of case, have a look at it. It will explain the steps you have to take to provide and exchange information about the claim you are planning to make and give you a pretty clear idea of what is involved.
The first step you have to take is to communicate with the other side providing specific information. You may hear this called a ‘letter of claim’ or a ‘letter before action’ or in some types of case a ‘claim notification form’.
Some pre-action protocols provide a form of template letter with blanks which you have to complete with information relevant to your case. For more on this see the section called Letter of claim.
Low value personal injury claims
If you have a personal injury claim where the injury element is worth over £1,500 (or £1000 if the case started before 6th April 2022) and the overall claim is worth under £25,000, then you must start the pre-action protocol in a particular way using an online process called the Claims Portal (except where it is caused by a road traffic accident that occurred on or after May 31st 2021- see Personal Injury claim caused by a car crash below).You may hear this type of claim referred to as a ‘low value’ personal injury claim.
The Claims Portal is available for use by litigants in person as well as lawyers. Currently there is no charge for using the service.
You must use the Claims Portal to notify the other side of your claim if either of the following pre-action protocols applies to your case:
The Claims Portal is designed to take you through a process where the defendant or their insurer is bound by court rules to respond promptly to you when you tell them about your claim. They have to provide you with relevant information, investigate your case within three months, and actively consider whether rehabilitation (for example, medical help such as physiotherapy) is appropriate.
You can find information about the process at Introduction to the process.
You also need to understand the costs consequences of using the Claims Portal.
Personal Injury claim caused by a car crash
If you have a personal injury claim caused by a road traffic accident that occurred on or after May 31st 2021 where the injury element is worth under £5,000 and the overall claim is worth under £10,000, none of the exceptions occur, then you have a small claim and you must instead start the pre-action protocol using an online process called the Official Injury Claim service. See How to make a small claim about injuries caused by a car accident for more guidance.
Pre-action conduct
If there isn’t a specific pre-action protocol that applies to your case, the court will expect you to follow the general rules in the ‘Practice Direction - Pre-Action Conduct’.
These rules describe how the court will normally expect you and the other side to behave before a legal case starts. Essentially this is a ‘cards on the table’ approach. The aim is to encourage early and full information exchange so each side can:
- understand each other’s position,
- make decisions about how to proceed,
- try to settle without starting court proceedings,
- consider some form of Alternative Dispute Resolution, like mediation,
- support the efficient management of the claim, and
- reduce the cost of resolving the claim.