ExpungeReady

How to file for expungement without a lawyer

Last updated: May 2026

Filing your own expungement or sealing petition is realistic in most states for straightforward cases. The state court system publishes standardized forms, filing fees are modest, and the procedural rules, while strict, are documented. This guide explains when DIY is realistic, what each state requires, and when you should hire an attorney instead.

Not legal advice

ExpungeReady is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. The information on this page is general educational content about state expungement and record-sealing procedures. Document-preparation services we link to are not a substitute for legal representation. Eligibility rules vary by state, county, and individual circumstances — small mistakes on a petition can cause the court to deny your request.

If your case involves felony convictions, multiple offenses, immigration consequences, professional licensing, federal records, or any uncertainty about eligibility, consult a licensed attorney in your state before filing.

ExpungeReady earns a commission on some links on this page. We only recommend providers we believe are useful for self-represented petitioners.

Is DIY realistic for your case?

Most expungement filings have three parts: gather the supporting documents, complete the petition, and serve the right people. Whether you can do that yourself depends on the complexity of your case, not your level of legal knowledge.

DIY is usually realistic when:

Hire an attorney when:

Not sure which category you're in? Use our consultation-prep worksheet — it organizes the same information an attorney will ask about at a consultation and points you at the right educational resources.

The three steps every DIY expungement requires

  1. Pull your record. Order your own state criminal-history report (see our background-check guide for self-check links and fees). You need this to confirm exactly what is on file, what disposition is recorded, and which agencies hold copies of the record. Filing a petition that doesn't match the official record is the most common reason petitions get rejected.
  2. Complete the forms. Every state publishes standardized petition forms. Most also publish a self-help packet explaining the rules. You can fill these out yourself, or use a legal-forms service that pre-fills them based on your answers (faster and less error-prone, but does not provide legal advice).
  3. File and serve. Submit the petition to the right court, pay the filing fee, and serve copies on the prosecutor's office and any other parties the statute requires. Each state's rules are slightly different — see your state page below.

State-by-state filing guides

Each state's procedure, forms, fees, and timeline are different. Pick your state below:

If DIY isn't right for you

If your case is complex, or you'd rather have a licensed attorney handle the petition, browse our directory of vetted expungement attorneys organized by state and city. Profiles are built from public state-bar records — every attorney we list is currently active and in good standing.

Frequently asked questions

Can I file an expungement without a lawyer?

Yes, in most states. For simple cases — a single dismissed charge, a first-offense misdemeanor with a clean post-arrest history, or marijuana possession in states with statutory auto-vacate — filing pro se is realistic. Complex cases (multi-county records, deferred adjudications, felony convictions, anything with immigration consequences) generally require an attorney.

How much does it cost to file an expungement yourself?

Court filing fees range from $0 (Washington, dismissed-charge North Carolina) to about $280–$500 (Texas). Most states fall between $50 and $175. Add another $20–$100 for fingerprinting, certified copies, and service-of-process fees. Document-preparation services from $40 to $200 will fill out the forms based on your inputs.

How long does an expungement take?

2–4 months in fast states (Washington, Georgia), 3–6 months in moderate states (Ohio, Michigan), 6–12 months in slower states (Florida, Texas, North Carolina). Add another 30–60 days after the order for state and private databases to remove the entry.

What if my petition is denied?

A denial is usually based on a specific eligibility problem (waiting period, ineligible offense, outstanding fines, undisclosed prior offense). In most states you can address the issue and refile after waiting a statutory period. After a denial is the moment when hiring an attorney typically pays off — they will identify what went wrong and whether a refile has a realistic chance.