How Long Do You Have to File a Personal Injury Lawsuit in Wisconsin?

Every personal injury claim in Wisconsin has a deadline. Miss it, and you lose the right to sue — permanently, regardless of how strong your case is. Understanding the statute of limitations is the first thing anyone with a potential claim needs to know.

The General Rule: Three Years

Wisconsin’s general statute of limitations for personal injury claims is three years from the date of the injury. This applies to most car accidents, slip and fall cases, and other injury claims against private individuals or businesses.

Important Exceptions

Claims against government entities — If your claim is against a Wisconsin municipality, county, or state agency, the deadline is much shorter. You must file a formal notice of claim within 120 days of the injury. Missing this notice requirement bars your claim entirely, even if the three-year period hasn’t expired.

Wrongful death — Claims for wrongful death must be filed within three years of the date of death.

Medical malpractice — Three years from the date of the act or omission, or one year from the date the injury was discovered (or should have been discovered), whichever is later — but no more than five years from the act regardless.

Minors — For injuries to children, the statute of limitations generally doesn’t begin running until the child turns 18.

Don’t Wait

Even if the deadline hasn’t passed, waiting hurts your case. Evidence disappears. Witnesses forget. Surveillance footage gets overwritten. The sooner you contact an attorney, the better your evidence is preserved and the stronger your position.

Attorney Christopher Carson handles personal injury cases throughout Milwaukee and Waukesha counties. Call (262) 860-8932.

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