Rhode Island Personal Injury Statute of Limitations
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If you were injured in Rhode Island — in a car crash on I-95, a fall at a Providence business, a dog attack in Warwick, or any accident caused by someone else’s negligence — you have the right to pursue full compensation from those responsible. Rhode Island law is designed to protect injury victims, and MFC Law was built to make that protection real.
At the Law Offices of Michael F. Campopiano, we have spent nearly two decades fighting for Rhode Island families across every type of personal injury case. Michael F. Campopiano answers client calls directly, moves fast to preserve evidence, and does not back down from insurance companies. Call us at (401) 288-3888 for a free consultation. You pay nothing unless we win.
3 Years
Standard deadline to file a personal injury lawsuit in Rhode Island from the date of the injury
RI General Law 9-1-14
60 Days
Notice deadline to preserve a claim against a Rhode Island city or town — missing it permanently bars the claim
RI General Law 45-15-5
2 Years
Wrongful death deadline in Rhode Island — shorter than the standard personal injury limit
RI General Law 10-7-2
The Standard Rhode Island Personal Injury Deadline: 3 Years
Under Rhode Island General Law 9-1-14, you have three years from the date of your injury to file a personal injury lawsuit in Rhode Island civil court. This covers the vast majority of accident types:
- Car and motorcycle accidents on public roads
- Slip and fall cases on private commercial or residential property
- Dog bites and animal attacks
- Premises liability claims against landlords and property owners
- Pedestrian accidents involving private vehicles
- Uber and Lyft accidents involving rideshare drivers
- Product liability claims involving defective products
Three years sounds like a long time. It is not. Evidence disappears within days. Surveillance footage is overwritten in 24 to 72 hours. Witnesses move and forget. The best cases are built on evidence gathered immediately after the accident.
Critical Exceptions That Shorten Your Deadline
The 60-Day Municipal Notice Rule — The Most Dangerous Deadline
Under Rhode Island General Law 45-15-5, if your injury occurred on government-owned property, involved a government vehicle, or was caused by a government employee, you must serve formal written notice on the city or town within 60 days of the injury. This is a prerequisite to filing suit. Missing it permanently bars your claim against the municipality, no matter how clear the negligence.
What triggers the 60-day rule:
- Slip and fall on a public sidewalk or in a municipal building
- Accident caused by a city vehicle such as a school bus, police car, or public works truck
- Injury in a public park, recreation area, or government office
- Fall on a government-maintained road surface
The notice must be formally served on the city or town clerk, not simply mailed or emailed. It must include the date, location, hazard description, and your injuries. A defective notice can be as fatal as no notice at all. See our dedicated page on government property slip and fall claims.
Wrongful Death: 2 Years
Under Rhode Island General Law 10-7-2, wrongful death claims must be filed within two years of the date of death, not the date of the accident. This is a shorter window than the standard personal injury limit and has no commonly recognized exceptions. Families who lose a loved one to someone else’s negligence must act immediately.
Claims Involving Minors: Tolled Until Age 18
When the injured person is a minor at the time of the accident, the three-year statute of limitations is tolled, meaning it does not begin running, until the child turns 18. At that point the three-year clock starts. However, parents and guardians can file a claim on a minor’s behalf before age 18, and doing so early preserves evidence that will not exist years later.
The Discovery Rule for Latent Injuries
When an injury or its cause is not immediately apparent, Rhode Island courts recognize the discovery rule, which can delay the start of the limitations period until the plaintiff knew or reasonably should have known about the injury and its cause. This most commonly applies in medical malpractice, toxic exposure, and occupational disease cases, not in typical accident scenarios.
Claims Against the State of Rhode Island
Claims against the State of Rhode Island itself, as distinguished from individual cities and towns, are governed by the Rhode Island Tort Claims Act. These claims carry separate procedural requirements and complexity. They require early legal attention.
60 days.
That is the window to file a notice of claim against a Rhode Island city or town. Miss it, and your case against the municipality is permanently gone — even if you file the lawsuit within three years.
Source: RI General Law 45-15-5
Rhode Island Injury Deadline Reference Chart
| Claim Type | Deadline | Authority |
|---|---|---|
| Standard personal injury (car, slip & fall, dog bite, etc.) | 3 years from injury date | RI Gen. Law 9-1-14 |
| Wrongful death | 2 years from date of death | RI Gen. Law 10-7-2 |
| Claims against municipalities (cities/towns) | 60-day written notice BEFORE suit + 3 years | RI Gen. Law 45-15-5 |
| Claims against the State of Rhode Island | Special procedures under RI Tort Claims Act | RI Gen. Law 9-31-1 |
| Claims involving minors | Tolled until age 18, then 3 years | Standard tolling rule |
| Medical malpractice | 3 years from discovery | Discovery rule applies |
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- Throughout Rhode Island & Massachusetts, helping victims of personal injury get the care they deserve.
“When you choose us, you can be rest assured that you will receive personalized attention and a comprehensive legal strategy tailored to your unique circumstances. Our skilled lawyers will guide you through every step of the legal process, explaining your rights and options in clear, straightforward language.
We handle a wide range of personal injury cases, including car accidents, slip and falls, Dog Bite, and more. No matter the complexity of your case, we have the expertise and resources to fight for the compensation you deserve.”
Frequently Asked Questions: Rhode Island Statute of Limitations
1. What is the statute of limitations for a personal injury case in Rhode Island?
Three years from the date of the injury for most claims under Rhode Island General Law 9-1-14. Wrongful death carries a two-year limit. Government property claims require a 60-day written notice before you can sue. These are the three deadlines that matter most.
2. What happens if I miss the statute of limitations deadline?
Your lawsuit is permanently barred. The defendant will move to dismiss, and Rhode Island courts grant those motions. No amount of strong evidence, serious injuries, or clear fault on the other side will save a case filed after the deadline has passed. This rule is absolute.
3. Does the three-year clock start on the date of the accident?
In almost all accident cases, yes. The clock starts when the injury occurred, which is the date of the accident. The discovery rule can delay the start in cases involving hidden injuries, but for standard car accidents, dog bites, slip and falls, and motorcycle crashes, the accident date is the starting point.
4. What is the 60-day notice rule for government property claims in Rhode Island?
Under RI General Law 45-15-5, you must serve formal written notice on the city or town clerk within 60 days of an injury on government property. This notice is a prerequisite to suing the municipality. Missing it permanently bars the municipal claim even if you later file a lawsuit within three years. See our page on government property slip and fall claims.
5. How long do I have to file if a government vehicle hit me?
The 60-day notice rule applies when a government-owned or operated vehicle causes your injury. You must serve written notice on the appropriate municipal or state entity within 60 days or lose your right to sue that entity. The standard three-year statute of limitations also applies after the notice is filed.
6. I was hurt on a public sidewalk. How much time do I have?
If the city or town was responsible for the sidewalk, you have 60 days to serve the required notice or permanently lose the municipal claim. In some cases, a private abutting property owner is responsible for the sidewalk rather than the city, in which case the standard three-year limit applies. Determining which party was responsible for that specific sidewalk section is one of the first things we investigate.
7. My child was injured in an accident. How long do we have to file?
The statute of limitations is tolled until your child turns 18, then the three-year clock starts. Parents can file on the child’s behalf at any time before age 18, and doing so early is strongly recommended. Evidence does not wait for a child to become an adult.
8. Can the statute of limitations be extended or paused in Rhode Island?
In limited circumstances, yes. Minor status, the discovery rule, and certain government claim procedures can affect when the clock starts. These exceptions are narrow and require careful legal analysis. Do not assume an exception applies without speaking with an attorney.
9. Does filing an insurance claim stop the statute of limitations clock?
No. An active insurance claim does not toll or extend the deadline to file a lawsuit. Many people are surprised to learn that settlement negotiations, even active ones, do not pause the statute of limitations. You must file a lawsuit before the deadline expires regardless of where any insurance claim or negotiation stands.
9. What is the statute of limitations for wrongful death in Rhode Island?
Two years from the date of death under RI General Law 10-7-2. This is shorter than the standard three-year limit and has no commonly applied exceptions. If you have lost a family member to someone else’s negligence in Rhode Island, contact an attorney immediately.
Why Choose the Law Offices of Michael F. Campopiano?
Why Choose the Law Offices of Michael F. Campopiano?
Founded in 2007, MFC Law has spent nearly two decades fighting for injury victims throughout Rhode Island. Michael F. Campopiano built this firm on a simple belief: advocacy with compassion, when clients need it most. That means being accessible, honest, and relentless. Mike answers client calls directly, moves quickly to preserve evidence, and does not back down when insurance companies push back.
Our team speaks English, Spanish, and Portuguese, so every client feels fully understood and supported through every step of the process.
We represent injury victims across Providence, Warwick, Cranston, Pawtucket, and all surrounding Rhode Island communities.
Unsure how much time you have left? Call us today. We review your situation and make sure no deadline is missed.
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