Before a Nevada court issues a TRO or preliminary injunction, it almost always requires security.
That security is this bond — and the court sets the amount under NRCP 65(c).
It protects the party you’re enjoining if it turns out they were wrongfully restrained.
We size the bond to the court’s order, underwrite it, and a specialist returns a quote.
















The injunction won’t issue until the required security is in place. Here’s the path:
Send the case details and the security amount the court set (or expects). That figure is what we bond.
We review the amount, the matter, and your financials. You get a real quote — premium and any collateral terms — not a placeholder.
We issue the injunction bond on the court’s terms with the carrier’s power of attorney, ready to file so the order can take effect.
A temporary restraining order or preliminary injunction is a powerful thing — it can freeze conduct before anyone has proven their case. To balance that, the court makes the moving party post security.
This injunction bond protects the party being enjoined. If a court later decides they were wrongfully restrained, they can recover their costs and damages — up to the bond amount — without a separate lawsuit.
Because the figure is tied to potential harm and set by the court, the bond is underwritten, not flat-rated. We size it to the court’s order, underwrite your file, and surface any collateral terms before you’re committed.
These are the actual underwriting fields. Tell us the security amount the court set, and a surety specialist returns a quote — typically within one business day.
Start the application →If yours isn't here, the bond team can usually answer within the hour.
Send us the security amount; a specialist underwrites and quotes — typically within one business day. Collateral may apply on larger amounts.