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Rule 4.1.Service of process in foreign countries

Group II: Commencement of Action: Service of Process, Pleadings, Motions and Orders · Last amended May 2, 2022 · Last verified July 13, 2026

In one sentenceRule 4.1 governs service of a summons and complaint on an individual, corporation, or partnership located outside the United States, offering Hague Convention channels, foreign law, letters rogatory, or other court-approved methods not banned by international agreement.

Full Text of Rule 4.1

Text sizeJump to: (a) (b) (c) (d) (e)

(a) Serving an Individual in a Foreign Country . Unless otherwise provided by law, an individual--other than a minor or an incompetent person-- may be served at a place not within any judicial district of the United States:
(1) by any internationally agreed means of service that is reasonably calculated to give notice, such as those authorized by the Hague Convention on the Service Abroad of Judicial and Extrajudicial Documents;
(2) if there is no internationally agreed means, or if an international agreement allows but does not specify other means, by a method that is reasonably calculated to give notice:
(A) as prescribed by the foreign country's law for service in that country in an action in its courts of general jurisdiction;
(B) as the foreign authority directs in response to a letter rogatory or letter of request; or
(C) unless prohibited by the foreign country's law, by:
(i) delivering a copy of the summons and of the complaint to the individual personally; or
(ii) using any form of mail that the clerk addresses and sends to the individual and that requires a signed receipt; or
(3) by other means not prohibited by international agreement, as the court orders.
(b) Serving a Corporation or Partnership in a Foreign Country . Unless otherwise provided by law, a corporation, partnership or association may be served at a place not within any judicial district of the United States, in any manner prescribed by paragraph (a) for serving an individual, except personal delivery under (a)(2)(C)(i).
(c) Proof and Return .
(1) Service not within any judicial district of the United States must be proved as follows:
(A) if made under paragraph (a)(1) of this rule, as provided in the applicable treaty or convention; or
(B) if made under paragraph (a)(2) or (a)(3) of this rule, by a receipt signed by the addressee, or by other evidence satisfying the court that the summons and complaint were delivered to the addressee.
(2) Failure to make proof of service does not affect the validity of the service.
(d) Amendment . At any time in its discretion and upon terms as it deems just, the court may, by written order, allow any process or proof of service thereof to be amended, unless it clearly appears that material prejudice would result to the substantial rights of the party against whom the process issued.
(e) Acceptance of Service. No other proof of service shall be required when acceptance of service is acknowledged in writing and signed by the person served or his attorney, and delivered to the person making service. The acknowledgement shall state the place and date service is accepted.

Notes

Note: Rule 4.1 adopts provisions of the federal rule with respect to service of process in foreign countries. This new rule is intended to provide guidance as to the proper methods of service and proof of service in foreign countries, and is not intended to amend or supplant the provisions of existing Rule 4 with respect to the issuance or form of the summons.

Amendment History

Adopted by Order dated May 2, 2022.

Plain-English Summary

Rule 4.1 is a narrower companion to Rule 4, carved out on its own in 2022 to handle defendants who live or operate beyond any U.S. judicial district. For individuals, it offers a menu: any internationally agreed method reasonably calculated to give notice, such as the channels set up under the Hague Service Convention; if no such agreement applies, a method valid under the foreign country's own law, one directed by a foreign authority responding to a letter rogatory or letter of request, or — unless the foreign country's law forbids it — personal delivery or mail that requires a signed receipt; or, failing all of that, another method the court orders that no international agreement prohibits.

Corporations and partnerships served abroad follow the same menu, minus the option of personal hand delivery to an individual. Proving service looks different than it does domestically too: service made through an international agreement is proved the way that agreement specifies, while service made by other permitted means is proved by a signed receipt or other evidence satisfying the court that the papers reached the addressee. And as with Rule 4, failing to file that proof doesn't undo service that already happened.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does South Carolina have a separate rule just for foreign service?

Service abroad raises issues — treaties, foreign law, letters rogatory — distinct enough from domestic service that the subject was pulled out of Rule 4 and given its own rule in 2022 for clarity.

Does the Hague Convention control every case of foreign service?

Only when the country involved is a party to it. Rule 4.1 supplies fallback methods — the foreign country's own law, a letter rogatory, personal delivery, or mail — for countries and situations the Convention doesn't reach.

Can you serve a defendant abroad by mail?

Yes, if the foreign country's law doesn't prohibit it, and only using a form of mail that requires a signed receipt.

What is a letter rogatory?

A formal request from a court to a foreign judicial or governmental authority, asking that authority to arrange service (or other judicial assistance) within its own territory.

Does Rule 4.1 change how a summons is written up or issued?

No. Issuance and form of the summons still come from Rule 4; Rule 4.1 only addresses the method and proof of service once that summons needs to reach someone abroad.

How do you prove service was completed on someone in another country?

Through whatever the applicable treaty specifies, or, for other permitted methods, a signed receipt from the addressee or other evidence that satisfies the court the papers were delivered.

Source & verification. Rule text, official Notes, and amendment history are reproduced verbatim from the South Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure, adopted by the Supreme Court of South Carolina. Last verified July 13, 2026. · Official source
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