The latest available data from the federal courts show that during April 2025 the government reported 25,554 new civil filings.
According to the case-by-case information
analyzed by the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC), this number
is up 0.6% over the previous month when the number of civil filings of this type totaled
25,407.
The comparisons of the number of civil filings are based on case-by-case court records which were compiled and analyzed by TRAC (see Table 1).
When monthly 2025 civil filings of this type are compared with those of the same period in
the previous year, their number was up (5.3%).
Civil filings for April 2025 are lower than they were for the same period five years ago.
Overall, the data show that civil filings of this type are down 35.5% from levels reported in April 2020.
Figure 1. Civil Filings Over the Last Five Years
The long term trend in civil filings for these matters going back five years
is shown more clearly in Figure 1. The vertical bars in Figure 1
represent the number of civil filings of this type recorded each
month. The superimposed line on the bars plots the six-month moving average so that natural
fluctuations are smoothed out.
One-year and five-year change comparisons are based upon the moving averages.
Types of filings
Cases were classified by the federal courts into general types.
The single largest number of civil filings of these matters during April 2025 was for "Civil Rights", accounting for 17.3% of civil filings.
As shown in Figure 2, additional categories with substantial numbers of civil filings were "Prisoner Petitions " (16.4%) , "Torts - Personal Injury - Product Liability" (13.2%), "Contract" (10.4%), "Torts - Personal Injury - Other" (8.7%).
Jurisdiction
Within limits set by Congress and the Constitution, the federal district courts have jurisdiction to hear cases falling under any one of several categories.
The single largest number of civil filings of these matters during April 2025 was under the classification "Federal Question", accounting for 52.0% of civil filings.
As shown in Figure 2, additional categories with substantial numbers of civil filings were "Diversity" (31.8%) , "U.S. Government Defendant" (15.2%), "U.S. Government Plaintiff" (0.9%).
Figure 2. Civil Filings by General Types
Figure 3. Jurisdiction for civil filings
Rankings: Specific Nature of Suits
Court filings are also classified based upon the specific nature of the suit. Table 2 shows the top nature of suit categories recorded in the matters
filed during April 2025
Table 2. Specific Nature of Suit Types
Nature of Suit
Count
Rank
1 yr ago
5 yrs ago
Health Care / Pharmaceutical Personal Injury Product Liability
"Health Care / Pharmaceutical Personal Injury Product Liability" was the most frequent recorded nature of suit category.
"Health Care / Pharmaceutical Personal Injury Product Liability" was ranked 1st a year ago, while it was the 2nd most frequently invoked five years ago.
Ranked 2nd in frequency was the nature of suit category "Other Civil Rights".
"Other Civil Rights" was ranked 3rd a year ago, while it was the 7th most frequently invoked five years ago.
Ranked 3rd was "Civil Rights".
"Civil Rights" was ranked 2nd a year ago, while it was the 3rd most frequently invoked five years ago.
Among these top nature of suit categories, the one showing the greatest
increase in civil filings — up 30.5 percent — compared to one year ago was
"Other Personal Injury".
This was the same category that had the largest increase — 93.2 percent — when compared with five years ago.
Again among the top ten nature of suit categories, the one showing the sharpest
decline in civil filings compared to one year ago — down 2.3 percent — was
"Civil Rights".
This was the same statute that had the largest decrease — 96.1 percent — when compared with five years ago.
Top Ranked Judicial Districts
Relative to population, the volume of civil matters of this type filed in federal district courts during April 2025 was 76.3 per every million persons in the United States.
One year ago the relative number of filings was 70.6.
Understandably, there is great variation in the per capita number of civil filings in
each of the nation's ninety-four federal judicial districts.
Table 3. Top Ten Districts (per one million people)
The District of Washington, D.C. — with 533.2 civil filings as compared with 76.3 civil filings per one million people in the United States — was the most active during April 2025.
The District of Washington, D.C. was ranked 1st a year ago, while it was ranked 2nd five years ago.
The Southern District of New York ranked 2nd.
The Southern District of New York was ranked 4th a year ago, while it was ranked 5th five years ago.
The District of New Jersey now ranks 3rd.
The District of New Jersey was ranked 5th a year ago, while it was ranked 3rd five years ago.
Recent entries to the top 10 list were Northern District of Illinois (Chicago), Middle District of Louisiana (Baton Rouge) and Minnesota, now ranked 5th, 7th and 8th. These districts ranked 11th, 14th and 17th one year ago and 28th, 14th and 75th five years ago.
The federal judicial district which showed the greatest growth in the rate of civil filings
compared to one year ago — 64.9 percent — was Minnesota.
Compared to five years ago, the district with the largest growth — 588.0 percent — was
Vermont .
In the last year, the judicial District Court recording the largest drop in the rate of civil filings — 30.2 percent — was Vermont.
But over the past five years, Delaware showed the largest drop — 21.8 percent.