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Filing a motion to quash a subpoena can protect your identity and privacy, but understanding the full cost is necessary before making this decision. The average total cost to file a motion to quash ranges from $1,500 to $5,000, with federal court filing fees between $52 and $405 and attorney fees typically between $1,200 and $4,500, depending on complexity and jurisdiction.

This report breaks down exactly what you’ll pay to file a motion to quash, when the investment makes financial sense, and how costs vary by jurisdiction, case complexity, and attorney experience.

What’s covered in this breakdown:

  • Filing fees by federal district and court type
  • Attorney costs by state, experience level, and case complexity
  • Total cost ranges for straightforward vs. contested motions
  • Financial scenarios where filing makes sense vs. when it doesn’t

Understanding Motion to Quash Costs: What You’re Actually Paying For

When calculating the cost to file a motion to quash, you’re looking at two primary expense categories: court filing fees and attorney fees.

Court filing fees are statutory charges set by federal or state courts for processing the motion. These are non-negotiable and vary by jurisdiction and motion type. Attorney fees cover legal research, drafting the motion, filing court documents, and potential court appearances if the motion is contested. The complexity of your case directly impacts these costs.

Court Filing Fees by Jurisdiction

Filing fees for motions to quash vary significantly based on the type of subpoena, the court where you’re filing, and whether the motion relates to an existing case or requires opening a new action.

Court Type Motion Type Filing Fee
Federal District Court (General) Motion to Quash (related to existing case) $0 (no additional fee if case already open)
Federal District Court Motion to Quash IRS Subpoena (Customer Challenge) $405
Federal District Court Motion to Quash Administrative Summons $405
Federal District Court Motion to Quash Grand Jury Subpoena $52
Federal District Court Motion to Quash Foreign Deposition Subpoena $52
Federal District Court Miscellaneous Action (not related to pending case) $52
California Superior Court Motion Filing (general civil) $60
California Superior Court First Paper Filing (if opening new matter) $435 – $450
State Courts (Average) Motion Filing Fee $30 – $200

Key insight: If a federal lawsuit is already filed against you, filing a motion to quash typically requires no additional court fee. The motion is considered part of the existing case. However, if you’re challenging a subpoena before any case is filed (such as an ISP subpoena in a copyright case), you may need to pay a miscellaneous filing fee of $52 or open a new action with higher fees.

Attorney Fees by State and Experience Level

Attorney fees represent the largest portion of your total cost to file a motion to quash. These fees vary based on three primary factors: your state, your attorney’s experience level, and whether the motion is contested.

Average Attorney Hourly Rates by State (2025-2026)

State Average Hourly Rate Estimated Motion Cost (3-8 hours)
District of Columbia $850 $2,550 – $6,800
New York $800 $2,400 – $6,400
California $750 $2,250 – $6,000
Delaware $725 $2,175 – $5,800
Connecticut $675 $2,025 – $5,400
Virginia $675 $2,025 – $5,400
Illinois $650 $1,950 – $5,200
New Jersey $650 $1,950 – $5,200
Texas $625 $1,875 – $5,000
Washington $625 $1,875 – $5,000
Florida $600 $1,800 – $4,800
Georgia $600 $1,800 – $4,800
Pennsylvania $575 $1,725 – $4,600
Ohio $525 $1,575 – $4,200
National Average ~$650 $1,950 – $5,200

Note: Estimates reflect federal court fee-award benchmarks, including the Fitzpatrick/Laffey Matrix for complex federal litigation. All BitTorrent copyright cases are heard in federal court, so attorneys with federal litigation experience are required. Actual costs depend on case complexity and whether the motion is contested.

Total Cost Breakdown by Case Complexity

The total cost to file a motion to quash depends heavily on whether your motion is straightforward or becomes contested by the opposing party.

Scenario Attorney Hours Required Attorney Fees (@ National Avg $650/hr) Court Filing Fee Total Cost Range
Straightforward Motion (uncontested, clear procedural grounds) 3-5 hours $1,950 – $3,250 $0 – $52 $1,950 – $3,302
Standard Motion (some complexity, potential opposition) 5-8 hours $3,250 – $5,200 $0 – $405 $3,250 – $5,605
Contested Motion (opposition files response, hearing required) 8-15 hours $5,200 – $9,750 $0 – $405 $5,200 – $10,155
Complex/Appeals (multiple hearings, appeals process) 15-25+ hours $9,750 – $16,250+ $0 – $605 $9,750 – $16,855+

What drives complexity:

  • Whether the subpoena is overly broad or clearly improper
  • If the issuing party actively contests your motion
  • Whether you need a court hearing or can resolve on papers only
  • Whether expert testimony or additional evidence is required

When Filing a Motion to Quash Makes Financial Sense

Not every subpoena warrants the cost of filing a motion to quash. Here’s how to evaluate whether the investment makes sense for your situation.

Scenarios Where Filing Makes Financial Sense

Situation Why It Makes Sense Typical Cost Potential Savings/Protection
Copyright Subpoena with Settlement Demand ISP subpoena threatens to reveal your identity for copyright infringement; plaintiff typically demands $3,000-$8,000 to settle $1,500 – $3,500 Maintains anonymity; can negotiate from a stronger position or potentially avoid a lawsuit entirely
Overly Broad Business Subpoena Third-party subpoena demands proprietary business information unrelated to the case $1,700 – $4,000 Protects trade secrets and confidential data worth significantly more than legal fees
Privacy/Privilege Protection Subpoena seeks medical records, attorney-client communications, or other privileged information $1,500 – $3,500 Protects privacy rights and prevents disclosure of sensitive personal information
Employment/Reputation Risk Identity disclosure could result in job loss or professional reputation damage $1,500 – $3,500 Prevents employment termination or professional consequences that far exceed legal costs
Procedurally Defective Subpoena Clear procedural violations (improper service, insufficient notice, etc.) $1,000 – $2,500 High success rate; protects your rights at a reasonable cost

Scenarios Where Filing May Not Make Financial Sense

Situation Why It May Not Make Sense Alternative Approach
Low-Value Dispute Potential damages are under $1,000 Consider negotiating directly or complying with narrow requests
Legitimate Discovery Request Subpoena is properly issued and reasonably scoped Comply with the subpoena; fighting may cost more than compliance
Weak Legal Grounds Your objections are not legally valid Consult with an attorney, but likely not worth filing
Already Public Information Information sought is already publicly available Compliance costs less than litigation
Time-Barred You missed the deadline to file a motion to quash Focus on other defense strategies; motion will likely be denied

Decision framework:

  1. Calculate potential exposure: What’s at stake financially, professionally, and personally if your identity or information is disclosed?
  2. Evaluate success likelihood: Does the subpoena have clear procedural defects or seek privileged/irrelevant information?
  3. Compare costs: Is the $1,500-$5,000 investment in filing a motion to quash less than your potential exposure?
  4. Consider the value of anonymity: Can you put a price on maintaining your privacy and on controlling when/how you engage with the case?

Requesting a Copy of This Report

If you’d like to request a PDF copy of this cost breakdown report or discuss whether filing a motion to quash makes sense for your specific situation, you can contact us here.

Antonelli Law provides federal copyright defense nationwide, with experience filing motions to quash in federal courts across all U.S. jurisdictions since 2006. Our practice focuses primarily on BitTorrent copyright defense, and we’ve represented over 5,000 clients since 2010, including 2,300+ Strike 3 Holdings cases since 2017.

Your initial consultation is completely confidential and covered by attorney-client privilege, even if you don’t hire us. Schedule a confidential consultation to discuss your options with attorneys who have extensive experience handling these cases and can manage this for you.

 

Call us at (312) 201-8310 for a free, confidential consultation, or contact us here to schedule promptly.

Contact Us

Your consultation is completely confidential and covered by attorney-client privilege, even if you don’t hire us. You’ll speak directly with an attorney who specializes in federal copyright defense. We can manage this.