Request a Free Consultation

New Jersey Statute of Limitations for Personal Injury Claims

Request a Free Consultation
Posted on October 21, 2025

Time is not on your side. After a serious accident, you are focused on the immediate crisis: your health, your family, and your mounting bills. The last thing on your mind is a legal deadline. But in the background, a clock is ticking. 

This clock is called the statute of limitations, and it is one of the most unforgiving rules in the New Jersey legal system. If you miss this deadline, your right to seek justice and compensation is permanently lost, no matter how severe your injuries or how clear the other party’s fault. A New Jersey personal injury lawyer can help you file your claim on time and protect your right to recovery.

The at-fault party’s insurance company is acutely aware of this clock. They know that every day you wait is a day that works in their favor. Evidence disappears, memories fade, and you move closer to a date when your claim becomes legally worthless. 

They may even use delay tactics, offering the false hope of a settlement, to lull you into a state of inaction until it is too late. This is not a fair fight, nor a fight you should face without guidance.

Request A Free Consultation

Key takeaways

  • For most personal injury cases in New Jersey, you have a strict deadline of two years from the date of the accident to file a lawsuit.
  • Missing this two-year deadline, known as the statute of limitations, will permanently bar you from recovering any compensation for your injuries.
  • There are critical and complex exceptions to this rule, such as the “discovery rule,” claims involving minors, and much shorter deadlines for claims against government entities.
  • An insurance company may deliberately prolong settlement talks to try and run out the clock on your claim, making it essential to involve a lawyer long before the deadline approaches.

The Two-Year Deadline: New Jersey’s General Rule

Close-up of a legal book titled “Statute of Limitations” beside a judge’s gavel, pen, and eyeglasses on a wooden desk.For the vast majority of personal injury cases in our state, the law is clear and absolute. The New Jersey statute of limitations for personal injury claims, as defined by N.J.S.A. 2A:14-2, gives you exactly two years from the date your injury occurred to file a formal lawsuit in court.

What does “filing a lawsuit” mean?

This is a critical distinction that many people misunderstand. The two-year deadline is not for settling your case or even for notifying the at-fault party’s insurance company. 

It is the absolute final date by which your lawyer must file a formal legal complaint with the Superior Court in the proper county. This is a legal document that officially initiates your lawsuit. If this document is not filed and stamped by the court clerk before the two-year anniversary of your accident, your case is over.

Why the law exists

Statutes of limitations are in place for several reasons. They are designed to prevent the threat of ancient lawsuits, ensure that cases are brought when evidence is still fresh and witnesses are available, and allow potential defendants a sense of finality. This is what you need to know about how these time limits affect your right to pursue justice.

While the reasons are logical, the application of the law can be brutal for an injured person who is unaware of the strict timeline.

The insurance company’s advantage

The insurance company uses the statute of limitations as a powerful tool. They know that you are likely not thinking about filing a lawsuit in the early days and weeks after an accident. 

You are focused on your medical treatment and trying to get back to work. The insurer may string you along with promises of a fair settlement, asking for more and more documents, all while their calendar is marked with your two-year deadline. 

Their goal is to either settle your case for a fraction of its value or, ideally for them, to delay long enough that you lose your right to sue them at all.

The “Discovery Rule”: An Exception for Hidden Injuries

The law recognizes that it is not always fair to start the two-year clock on the date of the negligent act, especially when the resulting injury is not immediately apparent. This is where the “discovery rule” comes into play.

What is the Discovery Rule?

The discovery rule is a legal doctrine that pauses, or “tolls,” the statute of limitations until the point in time when a victim discovers, or by the exercise of reasonable diligence should have discovered, that they have been injured and that their injury may have been caused by someone else’s fault.

How it works in practice

This exception is most common in cases involving medical malpractice or exposure to toxic substances. For example, imagine a surgeon leaves a surgical sponge inside a patient. 

The patient may feel unwell for years without knowing the cause. If the sponge is discovered during another medical procedure four years later, the discovery rule would likely allow the two-year statute of limitations to begin running from the date the sponge was found, not the date of the original surgery.

Similarly, a worker exposed to asbestos may not develop mesothelioma, a related cancer, for decades. The statute of limitations for their claim would not begin until they receive a diagnosis and have reason to connect it to their past workplace exposure.

A skilled personal injury lawyer knows how to argue for the application of the discovery rule. This involves a detailed legal and factual analysis to prove to a court that you could not have reasonably known about your injury and its cause any sooner.

Special Rules for Minors and Incapacitated Individuals

Lawyers reviewing and signing legal documents at a desk with a gavel, contract papers, and a smartphone visible.

The law provides special protections for those who are legally unable to protect their own interests, such as children and individuals who are mentally incapacitated. These laws in New Jersey ensure that vulnerable individuals are given extra time and legal safeguards to pursue justice when they are capable or represented.

The Statute of Limitations for a Minor

When a child is injured due to someone else’s negligence, the standard two-year statute of limitations is tolled until the child’s 18th birthday. This means that for an accident that happens when a child is 10 years old, the legal deadline to file a lawsuit does not expire until their 20th birthday (two years after they turn 18).

While this provides a long window, it is almost always in the child’s best interest to pursue the claim much sooner. Waiting a decade can result in the loss of crucial evidence and the fading of witness memories, making the case much harder to prove. 

A parent or legal guardian can, and should, bring a claim on the child’s behalf long before they reach the age of majority.

The rule for mentally incapacitated persons

Similarly, if a person is legally deemed mentally incapacitated at the time of their injury, the statute of limitations can be tolled. The two-year clock would not begin to run until the person’s legal disability is removed and they are once again competent to manage their own affairs. 

This often requires a formal court determination and is a legally complex situation that requires careful handling by an experienced attorney.

The Most Dangerous Exception: Claims Against Government Entities

This is the most critical and dangerous exception to the two-year rule. If your injury was caused by the negligence of a public entity, such as a state, county, or local government, or one of its employees, you are subject to the New Jersey Tort Claims Act, which also affects the damages available for your recovery and limits how compensation is pursued against public entities.

This law imposes a much shorter and more complicated set of deadlines that are designed to protect the government from lawsuits.

The 90-day notice of claim deadline

Before you can even think about filing a lawsuit against a public entity, you must first file a formal Notice of Claim. This detailed legal document must be served on the correct government agency within 90 days of the accident.

Failure to file this Notice of Claim within the 90-day window will almost certainly result in the complete dismissal of your case. There are very limited circumstances under which a court might allow a late notice, but it is an incredibly high bar to clear.

The two-year lawsuit deadline still applies

Filing the Notice of Claim only preserves your right to sue. You still must file the actual lawsuit within the standard two-year statute of limitations. This two-step process is a trap for the unwary and is one of the most common reasons that valid claims against the government are lost, making crucial evidence preservation and timely legal action absolutely essential.

These strict rules apply to many common accident scenarios. If you are injured in any of the following situations, you must act immediately:

  • A slip and fall on a cracked public sidewalk or in a government building.
  • An accident caused by a pothole or dangerous condition on a public road.
  • A crash involving a police car, a public school bus, or a municipal garbage truck.
  • An injury at a public park or recreational facility.

FAQ for New Jersey’s Statute of Limitations

I’ve been negotiating with the insurance company. Does that stop the clock?

No. This is a dangerous and common mistake. Simply talking to an insurance adjuster, sending them documents, or engaging in settlement negotiations does not pause or extend the statute of limitations. The clock continues to run, and the insurer knows it. You must have a lawsuit filed in court before the deadline, regardless of the status of your negotiations.

What if the person who injured me died after the accident?

If the at-fault person dies, you can still bring a claim against their estate. The statute of limitations still applies, but there can be additional complexities and notice requirements involved in suing an estate. It is critical to have a lawyer manage this process.

How is the deadline calculated for a wrongful death case?

For a wrongful death claim, the New Jersey statute of limitations is two years from the date of the person’s death, which may be different from the date of the accident that caused the fatal injuries.

I didn’t realize how serious my injuries were at first. Does that change anything?

This is a situation where the discovery rule might apply, but it is a difficult argument to make. The insurance company will argue that you should have been more diligent in seeking medical care and discovering the extent of your injuries sooner. This is a fact-sensitive issue that requires a careful legal analysis.

Do Not Let Time Run Out on Justice

Richard Grungo Jr., EsqThe statute of limitations is not just a legal technicality; it is a final and absolute barrier to your recovery. The moments and days after an accident are overwhelming, but you cannot afford to wait. 

The insurance company is using the passage of time against you. Taking control of your claim means understanding this deadline and acting decisively to protect your rights long before that clock runs out.

A skilled personal injury law firm takes immediate action to preserve your claim. They investigate your case, manage the insurance company, and, most importantly, ensure that your lawsuit is filed correctly and on time, protecting your right to seek the compensation you need to rebuild your life. 

Do not let a legal deadline determine your future.

If you have been injured and are unsure about the timeline for your claim, contact Grungo Law for a free consultation. We can evaluate your case, explain the specific deadlines that apply, and show you how we can protect your rights. 

Call our Cherry Hill office today at (856) 548-8347 or complete our online contact form.

Request A Free Consultation