The first time I hired a process server, I handed over a subpoena with the recipient’s old address — an apartment they’d moved out of eight months earlier. The server made three trips. We lost a week. The deposition deadline nearly blew up the case. Nobody had told me that a single bad detail at the start cascades into chaos at the end.
Here’s what I wish someone had walked me through before that call.
The Short Version: Hiring a process server takes 5 minutes if you’re prepared. Routine service completes in 1-7 days; rush jobs in 1-3. Provide accurate documents and recipient details upfront, verify the server’s credentials, and you’ll have a signed proof of service in hand before the week is out.
Key Takeaways:
- Standard service costs $45-$70; rush service costs more but can cut turnaround to 1-3 days
- You must provide complete, accurate documents — errors cause delays no server can fix
- Always verify credentials: license, E&O insurance, and complaints history
- Parties to the case cannot serve their own documents; you need a licensed third party
Step 1: Find the Right Server Before You Need One Urgently
Nobody thinks about this until there’s a deadline in 48 hours. That’s too late to vet anyone properly.
Start with referrals from your litigation network or use a directory like ServeNow.com. What you’re looking for:
- License or registration where required (not every state mandates it, but the ones that do take it seriously)
- E&O insurance or bond — this is your protection if they botch the serve
- A realistic success rate — any server claiming 100% is lying to you
Reality Check: A 100% success rate claim is a red flag, not a selling point. Some recipients are genuinely evasive. An honest server will tell you that upfront and explain what they do about it.
Qualifications that actually matter: valid driver’s license, own vehicle, state/county training, court registration, background check in jurisdictions that require it. In Washington DC and other regulated markets, licensing exams and fingerprinting are part of the package. NAPPS membership is a useful tiebreaker when you’re choosing between two otherwise-equal candidates.
Step 2: The Initial Consultation (Don’t Skip This)
A good process server will want to talk through your case before taking the documents. Use this conversation.
Tell them:
- What documents need to be served (summons, subpoena, eviction notice, court order)
- Your deadline, including any statutory service window
- Everything you know about the recipient: full name, last known address, workplace, vehicle, physical description, typical schedule
This is the step where the cost of laziness becomes obvious. Vague recipient info means the server wastes attempts on wrong addresses. Wrong addresses mean delays. Delays in active litigation mean motions to dismiss.
Step 3: Submit Your Documents
Hand over complete, accurate paperwork. This sounds obvious. It isn’t, apparently — incomplete or incorrect documents are one of the most common causes of service failure.
What “complete” means: correct case number, proper signatures, all required exhibits attached. If anything is missing or wrong, the server can’t fix it. That’s the court clerk’s job, and it adds days.
Pro Tip: If your documents require a certified copy or court seal, confirm that before you submit. An uncertified copy served on the wrong form is worth exactly nothing in court.
Step 4: Execution — What the Server Actually Does
This is the part most people have no visibility into, which is why it breeds anxiety.
For a straightforward serve, the server goes to the address, locates the recipient, identifies them, hands over the documents, and documents everything. That’s it. Done in one trip.
For evasive recipients, the calculus changes. Standard practice is 4-5 attempts, typically at varied times (morning, evening, weekends) to catch someone off guard. If that fails, servers shift to skip tracing — public records, social media, licensed database lookups — to find a current address. Surveillance is the next escalation.
Here’s what different service levels actually look like:
| Service Type | Turnaround | Attempts | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard (no-rush) | 1-7 days | 4-5 over 1-2 weeks | Non-urgent deadlines |
| Rush/Priority | 1-3 days | Accelerated schedule | Active litigation, tight windows |
| Immediate Rush | Same/next day | Multiple rapid attempts | Emergency injunctions, imminent deadlines |
| Evasive Subject | Up to 2 weeks | 4-5 + skip trace/surveillance | Recipients actively avoiding service |
Substitute service — leaving documents with another adult at the residence, or serving at a workplace — is permitted under specific conditions that vary by state. Your server knows the rules. Trust that.
Step 5: Proof of Service — The Deliverable That Actually Matters
Service isn’t complete until the server files proof of service with the court. This document — also called an affidavit of service or return of service — is what lets your case move forward. Without it, legally, nothing happened.
Timeline: results reported same day or next day after service. Proof of service signed within 1-2 days (servers typically visit their office every other day). Then it gets e-filed or mailed per your instructions.
Keep a copy. It should include: date, time, and location of service; description of how service was accomplished; server’s signature under penalty of perjury.
Nobody tells you this, but the proof of service is sometimes scrutinized more carefully than the underlying documents. One ambiguous line about “substitute service” can hand opposing counsel an argument that service was defective.
What Can Go Wrong (And How to Prevent It)
| Problem | Root Cause | Prevention |
|---|---|---|
| Service takes 2+ weeks | Evasive recipient, bad address | Provide every scrap of recipient info upfront; ask about rush options |
| Documents rejected at service | Incomplete or incorrect paperwork | Double-check before submitting; confirm certification requirements |
| Case dismissal risk | Unqualified server hired | Verify license, E&O insurance, complaints |
| Missed deadline | No rush option requested | Communicate urgency at first contact |
| Service legally invalid | Party to case attempted self-service | Always hire a neutral third party |
Practical Bottom Line
The process is simpler than it sounds, but the margin for error is zero. Courts don’t accept “we had a bad address” as an excuse for missed service windows.
Here’s your checklist:
- Before you need a server: Identify two or three vetted options in your area. Confirm licensing, insurance, and turnaround expectations.
- When you need service: Call first. Brief them on the case, the deadline, and everything you know about the recipient.
- At document submission: Verify completeness before you hand anything over.
- After service: Confirm proof of service timing and delivery method — e-file versus mail matters for your court’s docketing rules.
Standard service runs $45-$70 for most jurisdictions. That’s a rounding error compared to the cost of a defective service motion or a blown statute of limitations.
For the full picture on how process servers fit into litigation strategy — including how to find one in your jurisdiction — read The Complete Guide to Process Servers.
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Nick built this directory to help attorneys and collections firms find licensed process servers without relying on courthouse bulletin boards or word-of-mouth — a gap he discovered when a missed service deadline nearly derailed a case he was tracking for a legal tech project.