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SUPREME COURT NUMBERS AREN’T WHAT YOU MAY THINK
It has been Supreme Court gospel for decades that between 7,000 and 8,000 petitions for a writ of certiorari – that is, petitions asking the Supremes to review a case – arrive at the Court each year. The Court itself says so. SCOTUSBlog, the definitive Supreme Court fan/practitioner website does as well. Even Georgetown Law Library’s research guide cites the number as 7,000 to 8,000.
The Court’s 2023 Code of Conduct estimates the number as “approximately 5,000 to 6,000.” An exhibit inside the Supreme Court building states that between 5,000 and 7,000 such petitions are submitted, while the National Constitution Center puts the number at around 10,000.
They’re all wrong. The most recent year-end Supreme Court report indicates that, in the 2024-25 term, there were 3,856 petitions for review filed with the court. Of those petitions, more than half (2,527) were filed “in forma pauperis.” The remaining 1,329 were “paid” petitions.
The drop has been gradual. In 2006-07, the number peaked at 8,857, but the numbers have declined steadily since the 2013-14 term. The number dipped below 5,000 by the 2021-22 term and below 4,500 the next term.
The number of paid petitions (which make up almost all of the court’s cert grants) had declined only marginally since the early 2000s, with almost all of the decline in the IFP docket.
SCOTUSBlog reported last week that the decline is because “the IFP and paid dockets function very differently at the court. Although the paid petitions, as noted above, involve a significant investment of time and resources, IFP filings, by contrast, come from indigent litigants – often prisoners challenging their convictions or confinement conditions and representing themselves. As SCOTUSblog contributor Adam Feldman noted in a 2025 analysis, IFP petitions are typically granted “far less often” because many of these petitions raise fact-specific grievances without broader legal significance, do not present an issue on which the lower courts are divided, or revisit issues the justices have repeatedly declined to take up. Starting at the end of the 2022 term, 98.8% of IFP petitions were denied, compared to 86.0% of paid petitions. In 1946, Chief Justice Harlan Fiske Stone observed that IFP petitions “are mostly chaff.” Justice William Brennan also considered the overwhelming majority of IFP petitions to be “unworthy of full Court review.”
One SCOTUS clerk told SCOTUSBlog that they “flip through [the IFP petitions] pretty fast.” And in a 2010 SCOTUSblog column, Kevin Russell noted that IFP petitions “tend to get buried in a sea of other, mostly meritless, pauper petitions.”
SCOTUSBlog, The Serious Decline in Petitions Before the Supreme Court (May 11, 2026)
Wendy Watson, The U.S. Supreme Court’s Selection of Petitions In Forma Pauperis (2004)
~ Thomas L. Root





















