Kansas replevin bonds.
We size, underwrite & quote it.

Recover personal property that’s being wrongfully held — before the case is decided.
Kansas’s replevin process requires a bond in not less than double the value of the property.
The penal sum tracks the property, so we underwrite it rather than flat-rate it.
A surety specialist reviews your file and returns a quote, usually within one business day.

Required before the court issues an order for delivery under K.S.A. 60-1005
Penal sum is not less than double the value of the property the order covers
Underwritten on your file; collateral may apply to a large penal sum
Underwrittenvalue sets the amountA-ratedA.M. Best carriers1 business daytypical specialist reply
Trusted by industry leaders
NYCEDC
BDG
Capital
McKinney
Terra
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Triple Five
Georgetown
NYCEDC
BDG
Capital
McKinney
Terra
JLL
Triple Five
Georgetown
How it works

Built to get the order moving.

The court won’t issue the order for delivery until the bond is filed, so the bond is usually the gating step. Here is the whole process:

TODAY · 10 MINUTES

Send us the file

Apply online with the affidavit, a description of the property, and its value or the balance owed. That value drives the penal sum the statute requires.

WITHIN 1 BUSINESS DAY

A surety specialist underwrites it

A specialist reviews the affidavit, your financials, and any collateral, then returns a quote. The penal sum is set by the statute and the property value — underwriting decides approval and collateral.

ON APPROVAL

Execute & file

Once you bind, we issue the executed bond on the court’s required form with the power of attorney attached, ready to file with the clerk so the order for delivery can issue.

About this bond

What it is and who needs it.

Why claim-and-delivery needs a double bond

Replevin lets you recover specific personal property — a vehicle, equipment, or inventory — that someone is wrongfully holding, before the lawsuit ends.

Because the property changes hands before a judge decides who is right, Kansas requires the plaintiff to post a bond that protects the defendant if the seizure turns out to be wrong. That is why the penal sum is not less than double the value of the goods.

A defendant can post a redelivery bond — also in not less than double the value of the property — to get the goods back. Either way the amount tracks the property, so the surety underwrites the file and may require collateral on a large penal sum.

Kansas StatuteK.S.A. 60-1005 governs replevin (recovery of personal property). Before the clerk issues an order for delivery of the property to the plaintiff, the plaintiff files with the court a bond in not less than double the value of the property, with one or more sufficient sureties, conditioned for the return of the property to the defendant if return is adjudged and for payment of any sum recovered against the plaintiff. The defendant, within 24 hours after service of a copy of the order, may give a redelivery bond — to be approved by the sheriff, in not less than double the value of the property as stated in the order — and have the property returned.

You need this bond if you’re

A secured lender or lessor recovering a vehicle, equipment, or collateral on a defaulted agreement
A business reclaiming inventory, machinery, or goods being wrongfully withheld
An owner of personal property seeking its return before the case is decided
Counsel for a plaintiff who needs the bond filed so the clerk can issue the order for delivery

The application takes about ten minutes.

These are the actual underwriting fields — the affidavit, the property and its value, your business, and your financials. Submit once and a surety specialist returns a quote, typically within one business day. Free until your bond is issued.

Start the application →
FAQs

Common questions.

If yours isn't here, the bond team can usually answer within the hour.

What is a Kansas replevin bond? +
It is the bond a plaintiff files to recover personal property before judgment. Under K.S.A. 60-1005, before the clerk issues an order for delivery the plaintiff files a bond in not less than double the value of the property, conditioned to return the property and pay any sum recovered if the seizure was wrongful.
How much does it cost? +
It is underwritten, not flat-rated. The penal sum is set by statute and the property value — not less than double the value of the goods. A surety specialist reviews your file and any collateral and returns a premium quote, usually within one business day.
Why is the bond double the value of the property? +
Because the property changes hands before a judge rules. K.S.A. 60-1005 sets the plaintiff’s bond at not less than double the value of the property so the defendant is protected if the seizure turns out to be wrongful. A defendant’s redelivery bond is likewise in not less than double the value.
Will I need collateral? +
Sometimes, especially on a high-value penal sum. Because the surety guarantees the defendant’s damages, a large bond may require collateral and financials. We tell you what your specific file needs before you commit.
How fast can the bond be issued? +
A specialist typically returns a quote within one business day of a complete application. Once you bind and any collateral is in place, the executed bond issues on the court’s form, ready to file so the clerk can issue the order for delivery.
Related bonds

Other New York bonds.

Recover your property before judgment.

Send us the affidavit and the property value and a surety specialist sizes, underwrites, and quotes the bond — typically within one business day. Free until your bond is issued.

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