Statute of Limitations for Accident Claims by State
Statutes of limitations establish the outer boundary of time within which an injured party may file a civil lawsuit following an accident. These deadlines vary by state, by claim type, and by defendant identity, making a uniform national rule impossible. Missing a filing deadline ordinarily results in permanent loss of the right to pursue compensation, regardless of the merits of the underlying claim. This page documents the structure, mechanics, and state-by-state variation of limitations periods relevant to accident and personal injury claims across the United States.
- Definition and Scope
- Core Mechanics or Structure
- Causal Relationships or Drivers
- Classification Boundaries
- Tradeoffs and Tensions
- Common Misconceptions
- Checklist or Steps
- Reference Table or Matrix
Definition and Scope
A statute of limitations is a legislatively enacted time limit that extinguishes the right to initiate civil litigation if a complaint is not filed within the prescribed period. In accident law, these statutes govern personal injury and property damage claims arising from events such as motor vehicle collisions, premises incidents, product failures, and workplace injuries. Each U.S. state codifies its own limitations periods in its civil practice statutes — for example, California's is found at California Code of Civil Procedure § 335.1, which sets a 2-year period for most personal injury actions.
The scope of a given limitations period depends on the legal theory asserted. A negligence claim (see negligence doctrine in accident law) may carry a different period than a strict liability claim arising from the same event. Similarly, wrongful death actions typically follow their own dedicated statutes rather than the general personal injury period. The tort law foundations underlying each claim type determine which limitations statute applies.
Statutes of limitations are distinct from statutes of repose, which run from the date of a product's manufacture or a building's construction rather than from the date of injury. Both operate as absolute cutoffs, but their triggering events and doctrinal bases differ materially.
Core Mechanics or Structure
The limitations clock generally begins running on the date of the injury-causing event — a rule known as the "accrual" rule. Under standard accrual principles, a plaintiff who suffers injury in a car accident on March 1 in a 2-year jurisdiction must file a complaint by March 1 two years later, or the claim is time-barred.
Filing requirements are satisfied by submitting the complaint to the appropriate court clerk before the deadline expires — not by serving the defendant. Most states align with this rule, though a minority require service within the limitations period as well. The filing process in the U.S. court system governs the procedural steps that follow.
Tolling suspends or pauses the limitations clock. Recognized tolling grounds include:
- Minority: The clock typically does not run while the claimant is under 18. Many states restart the full period upon the claimant's 18th birthday.
- Mental incapacity: Periods are tolled for plaintiffs who are legally incapacitated at the time the cause of action accrues.
- Fraudulent concealment: If a defendant actively conceals facts necessary to discover the claim, courts may toll the period until the plaintiff discovers or reasonably should have discovered the fraud.
- Absence of defendant from the state: Several states toll the period during intervals when the defendant cannot be served because they are outside the jurisdiction.
- Bankruptcy stay: Filing for bankruptcy imposes an automatic stay under 11 U.S.C. § 362, which pauses civil proceedings, including limitations clocks.
The discovery rule is a separate but related doctrine. Under the discovery rule, the limitations period begins not on the injury date but on the date the plaintiff discovered, or reasonably should have discovered, the injury and its causal connection to the defendant's conduct. This rule is most commonly applied in medical malpractice, latent disease, and toxic exposure cases, though its availability in standard accident claims varies significantly by state.
Causal Relationships or Drivers
The variation in limitations periods across states reflects deliberate legislative policy choices. Shorter periods (1–2 years) reflect a legislative determination that witnesses' memories fade rapidly, physical evidence deteriorates, and defendants should not face indefinite exposure. Louisiana's 1-year prescriptive period for delictual (tort) actions under Louisiana Civil Code Article 3492 exemplifies this approach.
Longer periods (3–6 years for certain property damage or contract-adjacent claims) reflect countervailing concerns: injured parties may need time to assess the full extent of their losses before committing to litigation, and complex causation chains — particularly in product liability or environmental exposure cases — may not be apparent at the moment of injury.
Special defendant identity is a major driver of shortened periods. Claims against government entities are subject to administrative claim requirements under statutes such as the California Government Claims Act (Government Code § 911.2), which requires a written claim to be presented within 6 months of the incident before a lawsuit may be filed. The Federal Tort Claims Act imposes a 2-year administrative claim period for suits against the United States government, codified at 28 U.S.C. § 2401(b), after which a claimant has 6 months from denial to file in federal court.
Workers' compensation frameworks impose their own reporting and filing deadlines, separate from tort limitations periods. These are discussed in the context of workplace accident law and workers' compensation.
Classification Boundaries
Limitations periods split along at least five classification axes:
1. Claim type: Personal injury, property damage, wrongful death, and survival actions carry different periods even within the same state.
2. Defendant identity: Private individuals and businesses vs. municipal governments vs. state agencies vs. the federal government each trigger different filing requirements and timelines.
3. Plaintiff status: Minors, incapacitated adults, and prisoners receive tolling protections unavailable to legally competent adult plaintiffs.
4. Discovery vs. occurrence: States following the pure occurrence rule bar claims accruing from the date of injury regardless of knowledge; states following the discovery rule extend the period until the plaintiff knew or should have known of the harm.
5. Specific statutory schemes: Products liability, medical malpractice, dram shop claims, and uninsured motorist claims may each carry sui generis limitations periods that displace the general personal injury statute.
Tradeoffs and Tensions
The central tension in limitations law is between finality and fairness. Defendants and their insurers have a legitimate interest in resolving exposure; indefinite liability is economically disruptive. Plaintiffs with latent injuries — particularly those arising from toxic substance exposure or product failures — may face the injustice of being time-barred before they could reasonably have known they had a claim.
Courts and legislatures have addressed this tension imperfectly. Discovery rules mitigate the harshness of the occurrence rule, but courts disagree on whether "discovery" requires knowledge of the injury alone, or knowledge of both the injury and its tortious cause. The U.S. Supreme Court addressed related issues in federal limitations contexts in United States v. Kubrick, 444 U.S. 111 (1979), holding that the Federal Tort Claims Act limitations period begins when the plaintiff knows the injury and its cause — not necessarily the legal theory.
A secondary tension exists between uniformity and state sovereignty. Efforts to predict outcomes across state lines — relevant in accident case jurisdiction and venue determinations — are complicated because no federal statute governs personal injury limitations for state tort claims. The result is 51 distinct frameworks (50 states plus the District of Columbia).
Common Misconceptions
Misconception: The insurance claim deadline equals the lawsuit deadline.
Filing an insurance claim does not toll or satisfy the statute of limitations. An injured party can file an insurance claim and still be time-barred from filing a lawsuit if the civil deadline passes. The accident claim settlement process and the litigation deadline are legally independent.
Misconception: Ongoing settlement negotiations extend the deadline.
Negotiating with an insurer does not toll the statute of limitations in any U.S. state absent a formal written tolling agreement. Courts routinely enforce limitations bars against plaintiffs who delayed filing because they believed settlement was imminent.
Misconception: The statute of limitations is the same as the statute of repose.
Statutes of repose run from a fixed triggering event (manufacturing, construction completion) rather than from injury discovery. They can bar claims even before injury occurs, a constitutional issue examined by state courts under their respective due process frameworks.
Misconception: Government claim presentation requirements are optional.
In states with claims presentation statutes — California, New York, Texas, and others — failure to file a timely government claim is a jurisdictional bar, not a procedural technicality that can be waived or cured.
Misconception: A minor's limitations period automatically extends until age 21.
Most states toll the period until the minor's 18th birthday, at which point the standard limitations period begins to run. The period does not automatically extend three additional years in most jurisdictions; it restarts from the date of majority.
Checklist or Steps
The following sequence describes the structural elements of a limitations period analysis for an accident claim. This is a documentation framework, not legal advice.
- Identify the date of accrual — Determine whether the state uses the occurrence rule, the discovery rule, or a hybrid, and establish when the cause of action accrued under that standard.
- Identify the correct statute — Locate the specific limitations provision applicable to the claim type (personal injury, property damage, wrongful death, product liability, etc.) and defendant type (private party, municipality, state agency, federal entity).
- Check for government entity involvement — If any defendant is a public entity, identify the applicable administrative claim presentation statute, its deadline, and whether a claim was timely filed.
- Evaluate tolling grounds — Assess whether the plaintiff was a minor, legally incapacitated, or subject to fraudulent concealment at the time the claim accrued. Document the basis for any tolling argument with dated records.
- Calculate the deadline precisely — Apply the relevant period from the accrual date, accounting for tolling intervals. Confirm whether the jurisdiction requires filing, service, or both within the period.
- Verify multi-claim interactions — Where both property damage and personal injury claims arise from the same event, confirm that both applicable periods are separately tracked and preserved.
- Document evidence preservation steps — Independent of the legal deadline, document when physical evidence, witness identifications, and medical records were secured, as delay affects evidentiary quality.
- Note any applicable statutes of repose — For product liability or construction-related claims, identify whether a repose period runs concurrently or has already expired.
Reference Table or Matrix
Personal Injury Statute of Limitations by State — Standard Period (General Negligence Claims)
| State | General PI Period | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Alabama | 2 years | Ala. Code § 6-2-38 |
| Alaska | 2 years | Alaska Stat. § 09.10.070 |
| Arizona | 2 years | Ariz. Rev. Stat. § 12-542 |
| Arkansas | 3 years | Ark. Code Ann. § 16-56-105 |
| California | 2 years | Cal. CCP § 335.1 |
| Colorado | 2 years | Colo. Rev. Stat. § 13-80-102 |
| Connecticut | 2 years | Conn. Gen. Stat. § 52-584 |
| Delaware | 2 years | Del. Code Ann. tit. 10, § 8119 |
| Florida | 2 years (as of 2023 legislative amendment; prior actions at 4 years) | Fla. Stat. § 95.11(3)(a) |
| Georgia | 2 years | Ga. Code Ann. § 9-3-33 |
| Hawaii | 2 years | Haw. Rev. Stat. § 657-7 |
| Idaho | 2 years | Idaho Code § 5-219 |
| Illinois | 2 years | 735 ILCS 5/13-202 |
| Indiana | 2 years | Ind. Code § 34-11-2-4 |
| Iowa | 2 years | Iowa Code § 614.1(2) |
| Kansas | 2 years | Kan. Stat. Ann. § 60-513 |
| Kentucky | 1 year | Ky. Rev. Stat. § 413.140 |
| Louisiana | 1 year (prescriptive period) | La. Civ. Code art. 3492 |
| Maine | 6 years | Me. Rev. Stat. tit. 14, § 752 |
| Maryland | 3 years | Md. Code Ann., Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 5-101 |
| Massachusetts | 3 years | Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 260, § 2A |
| Michigan | 3 years | Mich. Comp. Laws § 600.5805 |
| Minnesota | 2 years | Minn. Stat. § 541.07 |
| Mississippi | 3 years | Miss. Code Ann. § 15-1-49 |
| Missouri | 5 years | Mo. Rev. Stat. § 516.120 |
| Montana | 3 years | Mont. Code Ann. § 27-2-204 |
| Nebraska | 4 years | Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-207 |
| Nevada | 2 years | Nev. Rev. Stat. § 11.190 |
| New Hampshire | 3 years | N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 508:4 |
| New Jersey | 2 years | N.J. Stat. Ann. § 2A:14-2 |
| New Mexico | 3 years | N.M. Stat. Ann. § 37-1-8 |
| New York | 3 years | N.Y. CPLR § 214 |
| North Carolina | 3 years | N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-52 |
| North Dakota | 6 years | N.D. Cent. Code § 28-01-16 |
| Ohio | 2 years | Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 2305.10 |
| Oklahoma | 2 years | Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 95 |
| Oregon | 2 years | Or. Rev. Stat. § 12.110 |
| Pennsylvania | 2 years | 42 Pa. Cons. Stat. § 5524 |
| Rhode Island | 3 years | R.I. Gen. Laws § 9-1-14 |
| South Carolina | 3 years | S.C. Code Ann. § 15-3-530 |
| South Dakota | 3 years | S.D. Codified Laws § 15-2-14 |
| Tennessee | 1 year | Tenn. Code Ann. § 28-3-104 |
| Texas | 2 years | Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 16.003 |
| Utah | 4 years | Utah Code Ann. § 78B-2-307 |
| Vermont | 3 years | Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 12, § 512 |
| Virginia | 2 years | Va. Code Ann. § 8.01-243 |
| Washington | 3 years | Wash. Rev. Code § 4.16.080 |
| West Virginia | 2 years | W. Va. Code § 55-2-12 |
| Wisconsin | 3 years | Wis. Stat. § 893.54 |
| Wyoming | 4 years | Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 1-3-105 |
| District of Columbia | 3 years | D.C. Code § 12-301 |
Table note: Periods shown reflect general negligence/personal injury statutes. Wrongful death, medical malpractice, product liability, and government entity claims carry separate periods and are not represented in this column. State legislatures amend these statutes; all figures should be verified against current enacted law.
References
- [California Code of Civil Procedure § 335.1](https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?sectionNum=335.1.&lawCode=