Current through July 1, 2026 · Last verified July 13, 2026
In one sentenceTrial Rule 87 requires most Indiana lawsuits to be filed through the e-filing system, sets rules for signatures, deadlines, probate filings, and proof of filing, and explains what happens when a party can’t e-file because the system itself fails.
(1)Unless otherwise permitted by these rules, documents submitted for filing in Indiana courts must be filed electronically with the clerk using the IEFS. The e-filing of documents is controlled by the case number in the IEFS designated by the User.
(2)Attorneys who wish to be exempted from the requirement that they file electronically may file a petition for electronic filing exception. The petition must be filed in each pending case to which these rules are applicable. The petition will be reviewed by the judicial officer assigned to that case and granted only upon a showing of good cause.
(3)Until further order of the Supreme Court, unrepresented litigants are not required but are encouraged to file using the IEFS.
(C)Proof of Filing. Users should save each NEF as proof of e-filing. Confirmation of e-filing may also be made by referring to the Chronological Case Summary of the court in which the case is pending through the CMS of that court.
(D)Conventionally Filed Documents. The clerk or court must convert conventionally filed documents into an electronic record. The filer must also conventionally serve these documents in accordance with these Rules and applicable Local Rule(s) and file a certificate of service. If the original documents cannot be converted into a legible electronic document, then annotation must be made in the Chro- nological Case Summary and the documents returned to the filer.
(1)A User filing a Last Will and Testament for probate shall file an accurate and complete copy of the Will and an affidavit, signed under the penalties of perjury, containing sub- stantially the following information:
(a)Affiant possesses the Decedent’s original Last Will and Testament or the Will has been deposited with the clerk of the court;
(b)Affiant is filing a true and accurate copy of the Last Will and Testament;
(c)Unless the Last Will and Testament has been deposited with the clerk of the court, Affi- ant shall retain the original Last Will and Testament until the Decedent’s estate is closed and the Personal Representative is released from liability, or the time to file a will contest has expired, whichever is later; and
(d)Affiant will file the original Last Will and Testament upon order of the court or as oth- erwise directed by statute.
(2)A personal representative or guardian shall file the notations regarding the allowance or disallowance of claims required by statute.
(1)All Users shall comply with the e-filing procedures prescribed by the Chief Administrative Officer of IOJA. The IOJA shall maintain a public website that contains procedures for sub- mitting data and documents through the IEFS.
(2)All Users shall submit documents in the manner required by the EFSP. The IEFS may be accessed via any Internet connection available to the User and at Public Access Terminals loc- ated in the offices of the county clerk.
(3)A User shall identify Non-Public Access documents containing information that is excluded from Public Access with a header, label, or stamp identifying the document as Excluded From Public Access. See Commentary to Rule 5 of the Rules on Access to Court Records.
(1)All documents electronically filed that require a signature must include a person’s sig- nature using one of the following methods:
(a)a graphic image of a handwritten signature, including an actual signature on a scanned document; or
(b)the indicator “/s/” followed by the person’s name.
(2)A document that is signed and E-Filed is subject to the terms and provisions of Trial Rule 11(A). A User may include the signature of other attorneys in documents e-filed with the court but in doing so represents to the court that the signature is authorized.
(H)Time and Effect. Subject to payment of all applicable fees pursuant to Section (A), a document is considered e- filed with the court on the date and time reflected in the NEF associated with the document. E-filing must be completed before midnight to be considered filed that day, and compliance with filing deadlines is determined in accordance with the time zone in the location of the court where the case is filed. E-filing under these rules shall be available 24 hours a day, except for times of required main- tenance.
(I)Certain Court Records Excluded From Public Access. Any User filing a document that is to be excluded from public access must do so as provided in Access to Court Records Rule 5.
(a)The rights of the parties shall not be affected by an IEFS failure.
(b)When E-Filing is prevented by an IEFS failure, a User or party may revert to conventional fil- ing.
(c)With the exception of deadlines that by law cannot be extended, when E-Filing is pre- vented by an IEFS failure, the time allowed for the filing of any document otherwise due at the time of the IEFS failure is extended by one day for each day on which such failure occurs, unless otherwise ordered by the court.
(d)Upon motion and showing of an IEFS failure the court must enter an order permitting the document to be considered timely filed and modify responsive deadlines accordingly.
(2)Other Failures not Caused by the User Who Was Adversely Affected. When e-filing is prevented by any other circumstances not caused by the User who was adversely affected, the User may bring such circumstances to the attention of the court and request relief as provided in Trial Rule 6(B), or the User may revert to conventional filing.
Amendment History
This rule’s current text took effect January 1, 2021. For the full history of earlier amendments and adoption orders, see the Indiana Office of Court Services.
Plain-English Summary
Trial Rule 87 makes electronic filing the default way to start and pursue a lawsuit in Indiana. A case gets underway by filing through the IEFS, paying the filing fee or securing a waiver, and filing the complaint together with the summons in the form Trial Rule 4(C) requires. That same e-filing requirement carries through the rest of the case: documents have to go through the IEFS unless a rule says otherwise. Two groups get some flexibility. An attorney who wants out of e-filing has to petition for an exception in each case where it applies, and a judicial officer will grant it only on a showing of good cause. Unrepresented litigants, though, aren’t required to e-file at all — they’re encouraged to, but conventional filing remains available to them unless the Supreme Court later orders otherwise.
Once a document is e-filed, the Notice of Electronic Filing serves as proof it was submitted, and a party can also confirm a filing through the court’s Chronological Case Summary. When someone does file on paper — because they’re exempt or the system failed — the clerk or court has to convert that document into an electronic record, and the filer still has to serve it conventionally and file a certificate of service; if a paper document can’t be converted legibly, the court notes that in the case summary and returns it. Rule 87 also requires Users to follow the data and formatting procedures the Office of Judicial Administration publishes, to submit documents the way their e-filing provider requires — using either an internet connection or a Public Access Terminal at the county clerk’s office — and to flag any document that’s excluded from public access with a clear header, label, or stamp.
Filing a will for probate comes with an extra safeguard: the filer submits an accurate copy along with a sworn affidavit confirming that the original is either in the filer’s possession or already deposited with the clerk, that the copy filed is true and accurate, that the filer will hold onto the original until the estate closes or the will-contest period runs out, whichever comes later, and that the original will be filed when the court or a statute requires it. For signatures, an e-filed document can carry either a scanned image of a handwritten signature or the notation “/s/” followed by the signer’s name, and signing a document this way carries the same responsibility as signing it on paper under Trial Rule 11(A). As for timing, a document is filed at the date and time shown on its Notice of Electronic Filing, it has to go in before midnight to count for that day, deadlines run on the time zone where the case is pending, and the system is available around the clock except for scheduled maintenance.
Rule 87 also protects parties when the e-filing system itself is the problem. If an IEFS failure keeps someone from filing, their rights aren’t affected — they can file conventionally instead, and, except for deadlines the law doesn’t allow to be extended, any filing deadline is pushed back one day for every day the system was down, unless the court orders otherwise. On a motion showing the failure occurred, the court has to treat the filing as timely and adjust any deadlines that follow from it. If e-filing is blocked for some other reason the affected User didn’t cause, that User can ask the court for relief under Trial Rule 6(B) or fall back on conventional filing.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I have to use the Indiana e-filing system to start a lawsuit?
In most cases, yes. Rule 87 requires a case to be commenced using the IEFS, unless an exemption applies, along with paying the filing fee, or having it waived, and filing the complaint and the required summons in the proper form.
Do self-represented litigants have to e-file in Indiana?
No. Unrepresented litigants aren’t required to file through the IEFS, though they’re encouraged to, unless the Supreme Court later orders otherwise.
How can an attorney get out of the e-filing requirement?
By filing a petition for an electronic filing exception in each pending case where it’s needed. The judicial officer assigned to the case reviews it and grants it only on a showing of good cause.
How do I prove I filed something by the deadline?
Save the Notice of Electronic Filing the IEFS generates for the document. You can also confirm the filing by checking the Chronological Case Summary through the court’s case management system.
What are the affidavit requirements for filing a will for probate electronically?
The filer submits an accurate, complete copy of the will along with a sworn affidavit stating that the affiant has the original or it’s already deposited with the clerk, that the filed copy is true and accurate, that the affiant will keep the original until the estate closes or the time to contest the will has run out, whichever is later, and that the original will be filed when the court or a statute requires it.
How do I sign a document I’m e-filing?
With either a graphic image of a handwritten signature, including a scanned actual signature, or the notation “/s/” followed by your name. A signed, e-filed document is subject to the same requirements as a signed paper document under Trial Rule 11(A).
What happens if the e-filing system goes down before my deadline?
Your rights aren’t affected. You can file conventionally instead, and, apart from deadlines the law doesn’t allow to be extended, the deadline is extended by one day for each day the system was down, unless the court orders otherwise. On a motion showing the failure, the court has to treat your filing as timely and adjust any deadlines that depend on it.
Source & verification. The rule text is reproduced verbatim from the
official Indiana Rules of Trial Procedure (T.R. 87). Prescribed by the Supreme Court of Indiana, under its inherent constitutional rulemaking power (reaffirmed by Ind. Code 34-8-1-1 and 34-8-2-1); originally enacted by the Indiana General Assembly in 1969. The plain-English summary is original and written by us. Last verified July 13, 2026. ·
Official source
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