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This guide outlines formatting and technical requirements for electronic filing in Iowa courts. This guide also
contains overviews of the electronic filing system, the use of non-notarized signatures, and the requirements to
protect nonpublic information in public court filings.
The information in this guide is summarized for convenience. It should not be relied upon as a source of legal
authority. Any court filing may be subject to any number of court rules, statutes, or other sources of law that do
not appear in this guide.
This guide is subject to periodic updates. The current version of the guide is posted on the Iowa Judicial Branch
website, http://www.iowacourts.gov/
The rules in Chapter 16 Iowa Rules of Electronic Procedure in the Iowa Court Rules govern the electronic filing of
all documents.
IOWA JUDICIAL BRANCH eFile User Guide
All filers, including attorneys, self-represented persons, and government agencies are required to file documents
electronically in court. You may register to file electronically at https://www.iowacourts.state.ia.us/efile/. There
is no fee to register.
Exceptions from registration and electronic filing requirements are of two types:
• One-time exceptions for good cause, such as a power outage at the filer’s office or home.
• One-time exceptions for self-represented defendants who need to make an initial filing in person.
• Exceptions for the duration of a case for good cause, such as when a filer cannot use a computer or
does not have regular access to the Internet at home through a device capable of displaying
documents. This inability to file in or follow his case could put a filer at a disadvantage in court. Only
the chief judge of the judicial district or the chief judge’s designee can grant an exception for the
duration of a case.
2. Exceptions by rule
A person who is excused from registration and electronic filing requirements is called an “exempt filer.”
• Items as specified in Rule 16.313, including the administrative record in cases where the court is
asked to rule on that record, transcripts of proceedings that are not available electronically, and any
other item not capable of being filed in electronic format, such as large maps or blueprints.
• Any documents filed in waiver of parental notification proceedings, which must be filed on paper.
1 2 3
Iowa R. Elec. P. 16.302(2)(b). Iowa R. Elec. P. 16.302(3). Iowa R. Elec. P. 16.309(4)
• An original notice or any other document that confers jurisdiction on the person against whom the
action is brought cannot be served electronically.5
• Requests for discovery, responses to discovery requests, and notices of deposition are not filed and,
therefore, are not served electronically. They should be served by mail, fax, or email.6
• Documents or exhibits that are proposed for restricted access or that are filed under an order restricting
access are not served electronically. The filer is responsible for service.
Parties are required to file with the court a notice of the service of a request for discovery, a response to
discovery, or a notice of deposition on another party.
Example
A case has three parties. One party is represented by an attorney, and the other
two are self-represented. One of the self-represented parties has registered for
electronic filing, but the other self-represented party has received an exemption
from the electronic registration requirement.
The attorney and the registered self-represented party must use the eFile
system to be served and to serve documents upon each other but must serve a
paper copy on the exempt party.
4 5 7
Iowa R. Elec. P. 16.315(1)(f) and Iowa R. Elec. P. 16.314(3). Iowa R. Elec. P. 16.315(2).
16.405(3).
6
Iowa R. Elec. P. 16.401(1).
Any filings from the exempt self-represented party will be served electronically
when the clerk scans and dockets those into the case.
If there were other exempt parties in the case, all parties, including the first
exempt party must serve the other exempt parties in paper or non-
electronically.
When a document is served electronically, a notice of electronic filing or presentation is posted into your eFile
account, along with a link to the document.
Electronic notice is only provided to registered filers who are case parties, meaning they have initiated the case,
filed an answer or appearance, or filed a notice of case association.8
Electronic notice will continue to be provided to you until you have filed a withdrawal from the case and, if
applicable, obtained an order allowing withdrawal.
Clerks of court and Technical Help Desk staff cannot provide legal advice.
If you encounter technical difficulties, contact the Technical Help Desk at 1-800-831-1396 or via email at
support@iowacourts.gov. Support is available 7AM-5PM, Monday-Friday, excluding State holidays and
furloughs.
8 9
Iowa R. Elec. P. 16.201(23). Iowa R. Elec. P. 16.309(2).
You must maintain a working email address. You are responsible for ensuring that the eFile system has the
correct email address, that it functions properly, and that it has not exceeded its size limitation.
Regardless of these precautions, the Judicial Branch cannot guarantee that you will receive the notifications it
sends to you through email. Consequently, email notifications do not constitute service of any document, and
are considered a courtesy. Service is considered complete when the notice is electronically posted to your eFile
account.10
A courtesy email message will be sent to you whenever something is received, filed, or returned on your case.
The email is a courtesy only and does not constitute service of any document.
The court can impose sanctions on filers for improper use of electronic filing.12.
10 11 12
Iowa R. Elec. P. 16.201(11). Iowa R. Elec. P. 16.304(1)(g)(2). Iowa R. Elec. P. 16.304(2)(d).
1. Request an exception from registration and electronic filing from the chief judge of each judicial district
where a case is pending.13
2. After you have received an exception in every active case, you must withdraw from the eFile system.
If your request to withdraw from electronic filing is approved, your login and password will be canceled, and
your name will be deleted from applicable electronic service lists.
Withdrawal from the eFile system alone does not mean you are withdrawn from a case or excused from
electronic filing – you need court approval for an exception from electronic filing.
Forms
The Iowa Supreme Court provides certain forms that can be used when filing. Forms are available online at
https://www.iowacourts.gov/for-the-public/court-forms/ and in the appropriate chapter of the Iowa Court
Rules. Not all court forms are available electronically. Review the Representing Yourself page to determine if
there is a specific set of forms for your case.
Signing Forms
Types of Signatures
Most documents requiring a signature may be signed in one of three ways:
Some documents require a nonelectronic or digitized signature, such as notarized documents or documents
signed under oath, affirmation, acknowledgement, or verification.
All types of signatures must be accompanied by a signature block containing your typed name, address,
telephone number, email address, and if applicable, law firm or (for filing agents) name of entity on behalf of
which the filing agent is signing.14 Crime victims and protected persons may omit mailing addresses, telephone
numbers, and email addresses from their signature block when necessary for their protection.
13 14
Iowa R. Elec. P. 16.204(1)(h). Iowa R. Elec. P. 16.305(4).
You are responsible for ensuring that confidential or private information does not appear in public court
documents, whether you prepared the document or not.15 When this type of information is required by law to
be included or is material to the case, you must safeguard it in the document by redacting it.
The only time you can include protected information in your documents without redacting it is when you are
filing a confidential document or filing on a confidential case. To help you determine that, consult the list of
Restricted Documents and Case Types on the Judicial Branch website. You may also apply to the court to restrict
access to a document or a type of information in your documents that you consider too sensitive to make
public16.
Filers who incorrectly file documents containing protected information may be required to pay damages and
reasonable expenses, cost and attorney fees associated with the filing of that information. They also waive their
rights to have their personal information protected and they may be found in contempt of court and charged as
such.
Determining how to properly deal with protected information and other personal information can be difficult;
unrepresented filers should consider contacting an attorney for assistance.
You do not need to safeguard information in documents and case types that are automatically held confidential.
15 16
Iowa R. Elec. P. 16.602. Iowa R. Elec. P. 16.405.
If you purposely fail to properly redact protected information, you may be sanctioned by the court. Sanctions
may include requiring you to pay damages and reasonable expenses, costs, and attorney fees associated with
the filing of that information. You also waive your rights to have your own personal information protected and
may be found to be in contempt of court and charged as such.
Document Type: All documents must be submitted as PDF (.pdf) files except for proposed orders. PDFs
must be searchable whenever possible.
Proposed orders: Proposed orders must be filed in a Microsoft Word editable format.
Document Format: 8.5 x 11-inch page. Orientation: Portrait except for some attachments. The top
margin must be at least one inch and be free of all written matter.
Submission Size: The size limit for District Court filings is 20 MB per single submission. The size limit for
Appellate Court filings is 150 MB per single submission. Any number of individual
documents may be included in a submission, as long as they do not exceed the size
limit.
Color: Documents should be scanned in black and white. Color scans should only be used
when it is essential to the case. Color increases the file size.
Resolution: The scanner resolution should be set to 200 dpi. Higher resolution increases the file
size. Documents scanned at resolutions higher than 300 DPI may be rejected for filing.
Viewability: Text must be legible, and images must be viewable. Documents must not be scanned
upside down. When necessary, attachments may be scanned sideways, though
pleadings should not be.
Protected Information: When confidential information is required by law to be included or is material to
the case, you must safeguard the protected information by redacting it.
Password Protected: Documents for filing must not be password protected.
Creating PDFs
Whenever possible, you should convert documents to PDF files electronically and make them searchable.
Generally, a PDF file created from an electronic document is searchable. Instructions for preparing documents
When it is necessary to scan printed (paper) documents for filing, you must convert the scanned image to text
using OCR. If the document is in electronic format, many word processing programs will convert it directly when
creating the PDF file. PDF conversion software is available without charge online.
If submitting a document (or portion of a document) in searchable PDF format is not possible, the document or
portion may be scanned and submitted in non-searchable PDF format.
Handwritten documents and photographs not available in electronic form are examples of documents that may
be submitted in non-searchable PDF format.
Proposed Orders
Proposed orders must be submitted in Word-editable format and must use one of the following fonts: Arial,
Times New Roman/Times, Courier New, Tahoma/Geneva, Helvetica, Calibri, or Cambria.
Do not combine proposed orders and motions into one document: they must be filed separately in their
appropriate formats: the motion as a PDF and the proposed order as a Word-editable file type.
• The size limit for District Court filings is 20 MB per single submission.
• The size limit for Appellate Court filings is 150 MB per single submission.
If a document exceeds the size limit, it can be split into smaller parts and filed in separate submissions. File the
submissions one after the other, so that they can be docketed together. Clearly label the separate documents in
order (“Part 1 of 3”, “Part 2 of 3”, etc.) in the Comments field when you file them. You should also alert the clerk
of court that the multiple submissions are all one document.
Documents shall include only legible words and viewable images. You are responsible for ensuring that the
scanning process preserves legibility and viewability in scanned documents. (This requirement does not prevent
the submission of a document for showing that the document is illegible.)
Audio exhibits must be submitted in .wav, .mp3, or .wma formats or else be submitted with a player application
that allows the exhibit to be heard.
Video exhibits must be submitted in the following formats or else be submitted with a player application that
allows the exhibit to be viewed:
• .avi
• .flv
• .mpeg
• .mp4
• .wms, or
• .mov
• Bookmarks: Hyperlinks to a destination within the same document that help the reader navigate a long
document.
• External hyperlink: Link to a destination outside the document that provide convenient access to
publicly available sources of law or court opinions.
Hyperlinks are not part of the court’s record, and the court does not exercise any responsibility over the content
or destination of any hyperlink. Hyperlinks must contain a complete text reference to the target of the link that,
when copied, will take a user to the same target that would be reached by activating the link. Material reached
through a hyperlink is not considered part of the official record or filing unless already part of the record in the
case. Complete citations are required to preserve the court record: hyperlinks may not be used as a substitute
for standard citations.
Example
A party citing the Americans with Disabilities Act might wish to provide a
hyperlink to the text of the Act on the United States Department of Justice
website. This is permissible if a standard citation is provided. “Americans with
Disabilities Act” by itself would not be sufficient; but “Americans with
Disabilities Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. § 12101)” would be sufficient.