How Long Do You Have to File a Car Accident Lawsuit? (All 50 States Compared)

Most drivers involved in a car accident don’t think about filing a lawsuit — not at first.
They’re focused on medical bills, repair shops, work schedules, and dealing with insurance adjusters.

But here’s a truth many victims learn too late:

You only have a limited amount of time to sue after a car accident — and once that deadline expires, your right to compensation disappears forever.

This time limit is called the statute of limitations, and every U.S. state has its own rules.
Some give you two years, some three, and others as little as one year to take legal action.

This guide explains:

  • How long you have in each state
  • Why these deadlines exist
  • Situations that can extend (or shorten) your time
  • How delays can hurt your claim
  • A real-world scenario showing how the clock can make or break your case

Let’s start with a story thousands of Americans unknowingly repeat every year.


🚗 Scenario: “Emily’s Delayed Back Injury in Colorado”

Emily was driving home through Denver when a delivery van ran a red light and hit her passenger side.
She felt shaken but “okay enough” to drive home.

Over the next few weeks, she began experiencing:

  • sharp lower-back pain
  • numbness in her right leg
  • difficulty sitting at work

She figured it would heal with time.
She didn’t see a doctor.
She didn’t call an attorney.
She didn’t file anything.

11 months later, she finally sought medical help.
Doctors diagnosed a disc injury clearly linked to the crash.

But when Emily tried to file a lawsuit, she discovered Colorado’s statute of limitations for car accident injury claims was only three years — and between medical delays, her insurance negotiations, and slow documentation, she was now dangerously close to losing her right to sue.

Her case became a race against the clock — a race many victims never win.


⏳ What Is a Statute of Limitations (and Why Does It Matter)?

The statute of limitations is a legal deadline that limits how long you have to file a lawsuit after a car accident.

Why these deadlines exist:

  • Evidence becomes harder to verify with time
  • Witnesses forget details
  • Medical records age
  • States want speedy resolution of legal disputes

Once the deadline passes:

You can no longer sue — even if your injuries are severe or the other driver was undeniably at fault.

This is why knowing your state’s timeline is essential.


📅 Statute of Limitations for Car Accident Lawsuits — All 50 States (2025)

Below is a clear, updated table for both injury claims and property damage claims.
(Most states have different deadlines for each.)

StateInjury Lawsuit DeadlineProperty Damage Deadline
Alabama2 years2 years
Alaska2 years2 years
Arizona2 years2 years
Arkansas3 years3 years
California2 years3 years
Colorado3 years3 years
Connecticut2 years2 years
Delaware2 years2 years
Florida2 years4 years
Georgia2 years4 years
Hawaii2 years2 years
Idaho2 years3 years
Illinois2 years5 years
Indiana2 years2 years
Iowa2 years5 years
Kansas2 years2 years
Kentucky1 year2 years
Louisiana1 year1 year
Maine6 years6 years
Maryland3 years3 years
Massachusetts3 years3 years
Michigan3 years3 years
Minnesota2 years6 years
Mississippi3 years3 years
Missouri5 years5 years
Montana3 years2 years
Nebraska4 years4 years
Nevada2 years3 years
New Hampshire3 years3 years
New Jersey2 years6 years
New Mexico3 years4 years
New York3 years3 years
North Carolina3 years3 years
North Dakota6 years6 years
Ohio2 years2 years
Oklahoma2 years2 years
Oregon2 years6 years
Pennsylvania2 years2 years
Rhode Island3 years10 years
South Carolina3 years3 years
South Dakota3 years6 years
Tennessee1 year3 years
Texas2 years2 years
Utah4 years3 years
Vermont3 years3 years
Virginia2 years5 years
Washington3 years3 years
West Virginia2 years2 years
Wisconsin3 years6 years
Wyoming4 years4 years

⚠️ The “Clock” Doesn’t Always Start on the Day of the Accident

For most car accidents, the deadline starts the day the crash happens.

But several important exceptions exist.

⏳ 1. The Discovery Rule

Some states allow the clock to start when you discover the injury — not when the accident happened.

Common in:

  • disc injuries
  • concussions
  • soft-tissue injuries

Example:
A victim doesn’t realize they suffered a mild traumatic brain injury until weeks later.

🧒 2. Minor Victims (Under 18)

Most states pause the statute of limitations (“tolling”) until the child turns 18.

Example:
In Texas, a 16-year-old injured in a crash has until age 20 to file.

🚑 3. Hit-and-Run or Unidentified Driver

Some states extend deadlines if:

  • the police never identify the driver
  • the case involves a phantom vehicle

🏛️ 4. Wrongful Death Claims

Usually have separate deadlines, often 1–3 years from date of death, not the accident.

🔍 5. Government Vehicles

If your accident involved:

  • police cars
  • USPS trucks
  • city buses
  • municipal workers

The clock can shrink drastically (sometimes as short as 30–60 days) due to “notice of claim” rules.


💥 Why Waiting Too Long Hurts Your Case — Even Before Time Expires

You don’t need to miss the deadline to damage your case.
Even waiting 6–12 months can weaken almost every part of your claim.

Insurance adjusters love delays because delays help them:

❌ Argue your injuries weren’t serious

If you waited weeks to see a doctor → they claim the injury wasn’t from the accident.

❌ Dispute causation

Without early diagnosis → no proof the crash caused the symptoms.

❌ Reduce settlement offers

They know courts will question why you waited so long.

❌ Push you until the deadline

Adjusters intentionally stall when the deadline approaches, hoping:

  • you’ll panic,
  • accept a lowball offer,
  • or miss the filing window entirely.

🧠 Scenario: “The Missed Deadline That Cost $80,000”

In 2023, a Tennessee driver named Chris was rear-ended by a texting driver.
He felt “fine” at the time and handled repairs through insurance.

Months later, he developed:

  • severe shoulder pain
  • headaches
  • sleep problems

Doctors linked the symptoms to whiplash and a possible disc bulge.
Chris tried negotiating with the insurer himself.

They stalled…
and stalled…
and stalled.

By the time he consulted an attorney, one year had already passed — Tennessee’s deadline had expired.

Chris lost:

  • medical compensation
  • pain & suffering damages
  • lost wages claims

Everything.

His attorney told him a sentence many victims hear too late:

“You had a strong case — but the law won’t let us file it anymore.”


🧾 Signs You Need to File Sooner Than Later

You should speak with a lawyer immediately if:

  • injuries are worsening or delayed
  • the insurance company is stalling
  • the other driver denies fault
  • the damage involves commercial or government vehicles
  • medical bills are piling up
  • you were in a hit-and-run
  • you suspect long-term disability

Time is your enemy in accident cases.


⚖️ How a Lawyer Protects You Against Deadlines

A car accident attorney can:

  • calculate your exact statute of limitations
  • gather evidence before it disappears
  • file required notices (especially for government claims)
  • negotiate with insurance adjusters
  • file the lawsuit before the clock expires
  • extend or “toll” deadlines when possible

Most firms offer:

  • free consultations
  • no upfront fees
  • contingency payment (you pay only if they win)

🔒 How to Preserve Your Right to Sue (Checklist)

✔ Report the accident within 24 hours

✔ Get medical treatment immediately

✔ Save all receipts, photos, and records

✔ Do not accept early cash offers

✔ Notify your insurance company

✔ Contact a lawyer long before the deadline

✔ Document every symptom and treatment

If you do all of these, you protect both your health and your legal rights.


🗺️ State-by-State Strategy: Which States Require Extra Caution?

⚠️ Extreme Risk States (1-Year Deadline)

  • Kentucky
  • Louisiana
  • Tennessee

These states are “danger zones” for delays — victims lose rights quickly.

⏳ Moderate-Risk States (2-Year Deadline)

  • California
  • Texas
  • Illinois
  • Arizona
  • Ohio
  • Georgia
    …and many others

🕒 Long-Deadline States (4–6 Years)

  • Maine
  • North Dakota
  • Missouri
  • Wisconsin
  • Rhode Island

Longer deadlines do NOT mean you should wait — evidence still fades.


📌 Key Takeaways

  • Every state has a strict deadline for filing car accident lawsuits.
  • Most states allow 2–3 years, but some only allow 1 year.
  • Missing the deadline means losing all legal rights — forever.
  • Delaying medical treatment or documentation weakens your case even before time expires.
  • Some situations extend or “toll” the deadline (minors, hidden injuries, government claims).
  • The safest choice is to consult an attorney within days or weeks after your accident.

💬 Final Thought

Insurance companies know the deadlines.
Attorneys know the deadlines.
The only person who usually doesn’t — is the accident victim.

That’s why understanding your time limit isn’t just legal knowledge — it’s financial protection.

When in doubt, don’t wait.
Call sooner, act sooner, protect your right to recover.