Unfortunately, we are only able to house documents for so many days, depending on the court and the state's policies. Once the link for a filing submitted through the efile site expires, it expires for us as well. We would recommend reaching out to the court for a copy of an expired filing link, as we have no way to restore the filing back to the eFile website.
Expired Times are subject to change. These are for accepted document links.
State | When do the links expire? |
Texas | After 30 days |
Illinois | After 540 days but varies by location. |
Georgia | Do not expire |
New Mexico | After 90 Days |
California | After 365 Days |
Idaho | After 30 days |
Indiana | After 45 days |
Louisiana | Do not expire |
Maine | Do not expire |
Maryland | After 60 days |
Massachusetts | After 45 days |
Minnesota | After 30 days |
Nevada | After 180 days |
New Hampshire | Do not expire |
North Dakota | After 30 days |
Ohio | Do not expire |
Tribal Courts | Do not expire |
Oregon | After 45 days |
Pennsylvania | After 120 days |
Rhode Island | After 45 days |
Vermont | Do not expire |
Notification of Service (Served Documents) links also expire. Check the bottom of the Service Notification email to see when the link expires. Example below:
If the Service link expires, you will need to ask the party that served the document for a copy.