Life Intelligence

Mediation, small claims, arbitration: which one for your wedding vendor dispute?

Not every vendor dispute belongs in court. Here is a comparison of the three most common dispute resolution paths, with realistic time and cost estimates for Austin.

Mediation

What it is: A neutral third party helps both sides reach a voluntary settlement. Non-binding unless both sides sign an agreement.

Cost: $300–1,500 total, split between parties. BBB mediation is free for member businesses.

Timeline: 2–6 weeks from request to resolution.

Best for:

  • Disputes $2,000–10,000 where both sides want to avoid court.
  • Ongoing relationships (venue deposit disputes where you still want the wedding to happen).
  • Situations where the facts are contested and a neutral perspective helps.

Bad for:

  • Vendors who have ghosted. You cannot mediate with someone who won''t respond.
  • Clear-cut breach where the facts aren''t in dispute.

Small Claims (Justice Court)

What it is: Texas''s Justice Court handles civil claims up to $20,000. No jury required. Self-representation is common.

Cost: $54–109 to file, depending on county. Travis County is on the lower end.

Timeline: 30–90 days from filing to hearing. Default judgments (if vendor doesn''t show) entered in 30 days.

Best for:

  • Clear breach with documented damages under $20K.
  • Vendor who is ghosting and will not engage.
  • When you''ve exhausted the DTPA 60-day window.

Requirements:

  • Must send DTPA notice first for DTPA claims.
  • Must properly serve the defendant (usually via certified mail or constable).
  • Must appear at the hearing.

Arbitration

What it is: A private arbitrator hears the dispute and issues a binding decision. Often required by contract (check for "mandatory arbitration" clauses in your vendor agreement).

Cost: $500–5,000+ in arbitrator fees. Wildly variable.

Timeline: 6–12 months typically.

Best for:

  • Mandatory cases where the contract requires it.
  • Complex disputes that exceed the small-claims cap.

Bad for:

  • Most wedding vendor disputes. Cost-benefit rarely justifies it unless the contract mandates.

Watch out for:

  • Arbitration clauses that pick an expensive forum or require travel to a distant city. Texas sometimes enforces these. Read your contract.

Realistic recommendations

  • Under $3,000: small claims or direct negotiation. Mediation if the vendor is willing.
  • $3,000–20,000: DTPA demand letter first. Small claims if no response. Mediation if both sides want to save face.
  • Over $20,000: consumer-protection attorney. Probably civil court.

The biggest factor: how responsive is the vendor? A responsive vendor → try mediation or settle directly. A ghosting vendor → small claims is almost always the right answer.


Sources: Texas Justice Court rules, Texas Law Help — Small Claims, Texas State Law Library — ADR.

AnalysisAutomatedSource: KnowYard EditorialPublished: Apr 12, 2026, 1:53 AM

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