The 2-Year Rule
Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Section 16.003 establishes that most personal injury claims must be filed within 2 years of the date of injury. This deadline — called the statute of limitations — is absolute. Courts have no discretion to allow late-filed cases in most circumstances.
Two years sounds like a long time. It isn't. Here's why:
- Building a strong personal injury case takes time — gathering medical records, accident reconstruction, expert witness retention, and witness interviews
- Evidence deteriorates fast — surveillance footage overwrites in 30-90 days, vehicle damage gets repaired, accident scenes change
- The sooner you have an attorney, the sooner critical evidence can be preserved through legal hold letters
- Medical documentation of your injuries needs to begin immediately to establish causation
Texas Injury Deadline Quick Reference
- Personal injury (most cases): 2 years from date of injury
- Wrongful death: 2 years from date of death
- Medical malpractice: 2 years from negligent act or discovery
- Product liability: 2 years from injury date
- Claims against Texas government: 6-month notice required first
- Claims against cities/counties: 6-month notice required first
- Minors: Until 2 years after 18th birthday
The Government Claim Trap
If your injury involved a government vehicle, government property, or a government employee — a city bus, county road defect, or municipal vehicle — Texas has an additional requirement that catches many victims off guard.
Under the Texas Tort Claims Act, you must provide written formal notice to the government entity within 6 months of the incident. Missing this notice requirement permanently bars your claim — even if the 2-year statute of limitations hasn't expired yet.
⚠️ Most Dangerous Deadline In Texas Injury Law
The 6-month government notice requirement is the most commonly missed deadline in Texas personal injury law. If you were injured on government property, by a government vehicle, or in any way involving a government entity — contact an independent attorney immediately. Waiting even a few months can permanently end your case.
Exceptions That May Extend The Deadline
The Discovery Rule: In some cases, the clock doesn't start until you knew or reasonably should have known about your injury. This applies most commonly in cases of latent chemical exposure, medical malpractice where the error wasn't immediately apparent, and some product liability cases.
Minors: If the injured person was under 18 at the time of injury, the statute of limitations is tolled — paused — until their 18th birthday. They then have 2 years from that date to file, giving them until age 20.
Mental incapacity: If the injured person was mentally incapacitated at the time of injury, the deadline may be tolled during the period of incapacity.
Fraudulent concealment: If the defendant actively concealed information that prevented you from discovering your claim, the deadline may be extended.
Why Acting Quickly Always Wins
Even with 2 years on the clock, every personal injury attorney will tell you the same thing — the sooner you act, the stronger your case. The reasons are simple and consistent across every case type:
Witnesses remember more. Physical evidence is intact. Medical documentation starts sooner. Legal hold letters can be sent before companies destroy records. And you give your attorney more time to build the strongest possible case rather than rushing to meet a deadline.
The statute of limitations is a deadline — not a target date. Treat it as the absolute last resort, not the goal.