Before a Nebraska court grants a temporary restraining order or injunction, it requires security.
The bond protects the enjoined party for the damages and costs if the injunction should not have issued.
The court sets the amount — these bonds are underwritten, not flat-rated.
Tell us the case and the amount the judge set, and a specialist returns a quote, usually within one business day.
















A Nebraska injunction is not effective until the bond is given and approved. Here is how the bond side moves:
Tell us the case and the security amount the judge set. Attach the order or proposed order so we can match the penal sum the court requires.
A surety underwriter reviews the matter and the applicant. The court fixes the amount; underwriting sets the premium and any collateral.
Sign, post any required collateral, and receive the executed bond so the restraining order or injunction becomes effective.
A restraining order or temporary injunction forces the other side to stop doing something before the case is decided. If it later turns out the order should never have issued, the enjoined party can be harmed in the meantime.
The injunction bond is the court’s answer to that risk. It guarantees that if the injunction is dissolved as wrongly granted, the enjoined party can recover the damages and costs it suffered while the order was in place.
The judge fixes the amount of security based on the potential harm. Because the figure can be large and the exposure real, these bonds are underwritten and may be collateralized — there is no instant flat rate. We size to the court’s order, underwrite the applicant, and quote it.
These are the actual underwriting fields — the case, the security amount the court set, and your business. Submit once and attach the order; a surety specialist responds, usually within one business day. Free until your bond is issued.
Start the application →If yours isn't here, the bond team can usually answer within the hour.
Send us the order and a surety specialist sizes, underwrites, and quotes the injunction bond — usually within one business day. Free until your bond is issued.