Quick Summary: Federal jury duty typically pays more ($50–$60/day), involves more complex cases, and has a stricter selection process than most state courts. Your summons will clearly state whether you've been called to a US District Court (federal) or a county/state court.

Most Americans who receive a jury summons assume it is for their local state court. But some are called to serve in a United States District Court — a significantly different experience in terms of pay, case types, schedule, and legal standards. Here is your complete side-by-side comparison.

How to Tell Which Court You've Been Summoned To

Look at the header of your summons carefully:

  • Federal: Will say something like "United States District Court, Southern District of New York" or similar US District Court name.
  • State: Will reference your state and county — e.g., "Superior Court of Georgia, Fulton County" or "New York State Supreme Court."

Side-by-Side Comparison Table

Category 🏛️ Federal Court 🗺️ State Court
Daily Pay — Days 1–10 $50/day $6–$50/day (varies by state)
Daily Pay — After Day 10 $60/day Same rate (some states increase)
Mileage Reimbursement Yes — IRS standard rate Varies by state ($0–$0.585/mile)
Case Types Federal crimes, civil rights, immigration, interstate fraud Violent crime, family law, personal injury, contracts
Trial Length Often 2–6 weeks; some multi-month Often 1–5 days; some multi-week
Jurors Needed 12 jurors + 2–3 alternates 6 or 12 jurors (civil vs criminal)
Verdict Standard Unanimous required (criminal cases) Unanimous for felonies; some states allow 10-2 for civil
Selection Pool Entire federal district (broad geography) County or local judicial district

💡 Key Insight: Because federal trials are often longer and more complex, federal jurors are more likely to potentially receive extended employer pay protections. Always check with your HR department when you receive a federal summons.

Types of Cases in Federal Court

Federal courts only handle cases arising under federal law or between parties from different states. Common categories include:

  • Drug trafficking across state or international borders.
  • Federal financial fraud and white-collar crime.
  • Civil rights violations under federal statutes.
  • Immigration cases and deportation appeals.
  • "Diversity jurisdiction" lawsuits where parties are from different states and the amount exceeds $75,000.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if my summons is for federal or state court?

Your summons will clearly state the court name. Federal courts are listed as "United States District Court for the [District]." State courts are listed with the state and county name.

Does federal jury duty pay more than state?

Generally yes. Federal courts pay $50/day for the first 10 days of service, increasing to $60/day after that. Most states pay $15–$50/day. Federal mileage reimbursement is also standard.

Are the cases different in federal vs state court?

Yes. Federal courts handle cases involving federal laws — drug trafficking, federal fraud, civil rights violations. State courts handle most criminal and civil cases involving state law.

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