Federal Courts Operating in Virginia: Districts and Jurisdiction

Virginia sits within two distinct federal judicial districts, each carrying its own docket, courthouse locations, and procedural traditions. This page covers the structure of those districts, the types of jurisdiction federal courts exercise over cases arising in Virginia, the circumstances that bring a case into federal rather than state court, and the boundaries between federal and state judicial authority. Understanding how federal courts operate within Virginia is essential context for anyone navigating the Virginia and U.S. legal system.


Definition and scope

Federal courts operating in Virginia derive their authority from Article III of the U.S. Constitution and from statutes codified in Title 28 of the United States Code (28 U.S.C. §§ 81–131). Congress established the federal judicial districts that cover Virginia; all federal district courts are courts of limited jurisdiction, meaning they may hear only categories of cases that Congress or the Constitution has authorized.

Virginia is covered by two federal judicial districts:

  1. Eastern District of Virginia (EDVA) — Created by Congress and headquartered in Alexandria, with additional courthouses in Norfolk, Richmond, and Newport News. The EDVA covers roughly the eastern half of the state, including Northern Virginia, Hampton Roads, and the Richmond metropolitan area.
  2. Western District of Virginia (WDVA) — Headquartered in Abingdon, with courthouses in Charlottesville, Harrisonburg, Lynchburg, and Roanoke. The WDVA covers the Shenandoah Valley, the Blue Ridge, and Southside Virginia.

Both districts are components of the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals, which sits in Richmond and reviews federal district court decisions from Virginia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, and West Virginia (Fourth Circuit, 28 U.S.C. § 41).

Scope and coverage: This page addresses federal courts operating within Virginia's geographic boundaries. It does not address Virginia's own state court hierarchy — including circuit courts, general district courts, or the Supreme Court of Virginia — which are covered separately in the Virginia court system structure reference. Cases that originate in other states but are appealed through the Fourth Circuit are also outside this page's scope. Federal administrative tribunals (such as the Social Security Administration's hearing offices) are distinct from Article III courts and are not covered here; those fall within the separate discussion of regulatory context for the Virginia and U.S. legal system.


How it works

Federal courts in Virginia exercise jurisdiction under four principal categories recognized by statute and constitutional doctrine:

  1. Federal question jurisdiction — Arises when a case involves the U.S. Constitution, a federal statute, or a treaty (28 U.S.C. § 1331). Civil rights claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, patent disputes, bankruptcy proceedings, and criminal prosecutions under the U.S. Code all fall here.
  2. Diversity jurisdiction — Arises when the parties are citizens of different states and the amount in controversy exceeds $75,000, exclusive of interest and costs (28 U.S.C. § 1332). A Virginia plaintiff suing a North Carolina corporation for a contract dispute worth $100,000 exemplifies this category.
  3. Exclusive federal jurisdiction — Certain subject matter is reserved exclusively for federal courts by statute, including bankruptcy (Title 11 U.S.C.), admiralty and maritime claims (28 U.S.C. § 1333), patent and copyright matters (28 U.S.C. § 1338), and federal criminal prosecutions.
  4. Removal jurisdiction — A defendant may remove a case filed in a Virginia state court to the appropriate federal district court if the federal court would have had original jurisdiction (28 U.S.C. § 1441). Removal must generally occur within 30 days of service.

Procedural framework in federal district courts:

The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (FRCP), promulgated by the Supreme Court under the Rules Enabling Act (28 U.S.C. § 2072), govern civil litigation in both EDVA and WDVA. Criminal proceedings follow the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. Each district also issues its own Local Rules — the EDVA and WDVA publish these through their respective court websites — which govern case management schedules, electronic filing requirements, and courtroom conduct at the district level.

The EDVA is widely recognized among practitioners as one of the fastest federal dockets in the country; its "rocket docket" scheduling norms routinely set trial dates within months of filing, a contrast to the longer timelines common in the WDVA. Both districts use the CM/ECF (Case Management/Electronic Case Filing) system maintained by the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts for electronic docket access.

For a grounding in core terminology used throughout federal and state court proceedings, the Virginia and U.S. legal system terminology and definitions reference provides foundational vocabulary.


Common scenarios

Federal courts in Virginia handle a concentrated set of case types that reflect the state's geography, economy, and proximity to federal government operations:

The general overview of the Virginia and U.S. legal system provides broader context for how federal and state court systems interact across these case types.


Decision boundaries

Determining whether a matter belongs in federal district court or a Virginia state court requires analysis along at least three axes:

Federal vs. State jurisdiction — comparative framework:

Factor Federal Court Virginia State Court
Governing authority U.S. Constitution Art. III; 28 U.S.C. Virginia Constitution Art. VI; Va. Code
Subject matter Federal question, diversity, admiralty, exclusive categories General jurisdiction over state law claims
Amount threshold (diversity) Over $75,000 required No equivalent threshold for original jurisdiction
Criminal matters Federal offenses (U.S. Code) Virginia criminal code (Va. Code Title 18.2)
Appeals path Fourth Circuit → U.S. Supreme Court Court of Appeals of Virginia → Supreme Court of Virginia

Key decision points:

  1. Does any claim arise under federal law? If a plaintiff asserts even one count under a federal statute or constitutional provision, federal question jurisdiction likely attaches, even if additional state law claims are present (supplemental jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1367).
  2. Are the parties diverse and is the amount sufficient? Both conditions under § 1332 must be met simultaneously; partial diversity does not satisfy the statute.
  3. Is the subject matter within exclusive federal jurisdiction? Bankruptcy, patent, federal criminal prosecution, and admiralty leave no discretion — state courts cannot exercise jurisdiction over these categories regardless of party agreement.
  4. Has a defendant exercised the removal right? Even cases properly filed in Virginia circuit or general district courts may be transferred to federal court if the defendant timely removes and the jurisdictional basis exists.

Cases involving both federal and state law claims may be litigated together in federal court through supplemental jurisdiction, but federal courts retain discretion to decline supplemental jurisdiction over state claims when the federal claims are dismissed early in litigation (28 U.S.C. § 1367(c)).

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