A state-specific breakdown of how personal injury claims work in Maryland, including the deadlines and court structure that apply.
In Maryland, the deadline to file a personal injury lawsuit is 3 years from the date of the incident — one of the first things to confirm with an attorney, since settlement negotiations with an insurer do not pause this clock.
Maryland follows a pure contributory negligence rule, which means any fault on your part, even 1%, can legally bar you from recovering any damages at all — one of the strictest fault rules in the country. This matters most in cases where fault is disputed — a rear-end collision with conflicting witness accounts, a slip-and-fall where store maintenance records are unclear, or a multi-vehicle accident where more than one driver contributed to the crash.
Cases in Maryland are filed in Circuit Court, part of the Maryland Circuit Court. Courts in the Northeast region tend to have denser dockets in metro counties, which can extend timelines for contested matters.
Maryland law can change, and every case has its own facts. Use this as a starting point, then confirm specifics with a licensed attorney in Maryland.
Document every injury with a medical professional immediately. Gaps in treatment are the single most common reason insurers devalue a claim.
Photos of the scene, witness contact information, the police or incident report, and any surveillance footage should be gathered before it disappears.
Adjusters are trained to ask questions that minimize payouts. A short, factual statement — or none until you've spoken with an attorney — protects your position.
Medical bills are only part of the picture. Lost wages, future care costs, and pain and suffering all factor into a full valuation.
Your state's statute of limitations is a hard cutoff. Missing it typically ends your right to recover, regardless of how strong the case is. In Maryland, that deadline is 3 years from the date of injury -- mark it now, not later.
For claims involving only minor property damage and no lasting injury, many people negotiate directly with an insurer. Once medical treatment, lost work time, or any dispute over fault enters the picture, an attorney's involvement typically increases the net recovery even after fees.
The overwhelming majority work on a contingency fee, commonly 33%–40% of the recovery, with no upfront cost and no fee if there's no recovery.
Valuation depends on medical costs, lost income, degree of fault, insurance policy limits, and the severity and permanence of the injury. No two cases are valued the same way.
You generally have 3 years from the date of the injury under Maryland's statute of limitations. Maryland also applies a pure contributory negligence rule, so your own degree of fault can affect what you're able to recover.