Maine — 2 years
In Maine, a defamation plaintiff has 2 years from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at 14 M.R.S.A. § 753. All Maine deadlines →
Every state's deadline for filing a defamation (libel & slander) lawsuit, with the actual state code citation. Updated for 2026, with notes on recent legislative changes, the discovery rule, and common tolling exceptions.
Defamation has the shortest civil deadline of almost any claim type. In roughly 28 of the 51 jurisdictions surveyed by Casefleet, the deadline is just one year — including every populous state except Florida, Massachusetts, and Washington. People defamed online routinely discover the trap too late: by the time they retain counsel, find the anonymous poster's identity, and gather evidence of damages, the clock has already run out.
Defamation is split into two categories: libel (written or otherwise fixed in a permanent form — articles, tweets, blog posts, social media comments) and slander (spoken — in person, on a podcast, over the phone, in a video). Most states apply the same deadline to both, but a few don't. Tennessee gives one year for libel but only six months for slander — a defamatory tweet may be timely while the same content spoken at a podium is not. Arkansas runs the other way — three years for libel, one year for slander.
The single-publication rule matters enormously for online defamation. Most states hold that the clock starts when a defamatory statement is first published, not at every share, retweet, or republication. A defamatory blog post published five years ago is generally time-barred even if it's still up and being shared today, unless the author made material changes or the content moved to a substantively new platform. This rule is plaintiff-unfriendly but well-settled.
A few situations can extend the deadline. The discovery rule applies in some states when the defamation occurred in a private setting and couldn't reasonably have been discovered earlier — a confidential file circulated within a company, for instance. Fraudulent concealment tolls the clock when the defendant's identity is unknown (common in anonymous online defamation), until reasonable diligence would have revealed it. Minor plaintiffs usually get the standard tolling until age 18. These exceptions are applied narrowly.
If you've been defamed and you're reading this, the practical advice is: contact a defamation attorney immediately. Not next week. Today. The shortest deadlines in tort law, combined with the difficulty of identifying anonymous defendants and gathering evidence of damages, mean that the practical window to build a viable case is much shorter than even the one-year statute suggests.
Defamation (Libel & Slander) statute of limitations for all 50 states, with state code citation where verified.
| State | Time Limit | Citation & Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Alabama | 2 years | Ala. Code § 6-2-38(l) |
| Alaska | 2 years | Alaska Stat. § 09.10.070 |
| Arizona | 1 year — URGENT | A.R.S. § 12-541 |
| Arkansas | 1 year — URGENT | A.C.A. § 16-56-1041 year for slander; 3 years for libel (A.C.A. § 16-56-105). |
| California | 1 year — URGENT | Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 340(c) |
| Colorado | 1 year — URGENT | C.R.S. § 13-80-103 |
| Connecticut | 2 years | C.G.S.A. § 52-597 |
| Delaware | 2 years | 10 Del. C. § 8119 |
| Florida | 2 years | F.S.A. § 95.11(4)(g) |
| Georgia | 1 year — URGENT | O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33 |
| Hawaii | 2 years | Haw. Stat. § 657-4 |
| Idaho | 2 years | Idaho Code § 5-219(5) |
| Illinois | 1 year — URGENT | 735 I.L.C.S. § 5/13-201 |
| Indiana | 2 years | I.C. § 34-11-2-4 |
| Iowa | 2 years | I.C.A. § 614.1(2) |
| Kansas | 1 year — URGENT | K.S.A. § 60-514(a) |
| Kentucky | 1 year — URGENT | K.R.S. § 413.140(1)(d) |
| Louisiana | 1 year — URGENT | L.S.A.-C.C. Art. § 3492Pre-7/1/24; Art. § 3493.1 (2 years) after. |
| Maine | 2 years | 14 M.R.S.A. § 753 |
| Maryland | 1 year — URGENT | Md. Cts. & Jud. Proc. Code § 5-105 |
| Massachusetts | 3 years | Mass. Laws Ch. 260 § 4One of the longest in the nation. |
| Michigan | 1 year — URGENT | M.C.L.A. § 600.5805(11) |
| Minnesota | 2 years | M.S.A. § 541.07(1) |
| Mississippi | 1 year — URGENT | M.C.A. § 15-1-35 |
| Missouri | 2 years | Mo. Rev. Stat. § 516.140 |
| Montana | 2 years | Mont. Stat. § 27-2-204(3) |
| Nebraska | 1 year — URGENT | Neb. Stat. § 25-208 |
| Nevada | 2 years | N.R.S. § 11.190(4)(c) |
| New Hampshire | 3 years | N.H. Stat. Ann. § 508:4One of the longest in the nation. |
| New Jersey | 1 year — URGENT | N.J.S.A. § 2A:14-3 |
| New Mexico | 3 years | N.M.S.A. § 37-1-8One of the longest in the nation. |
| New York | 1 year — URGENT | N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 215(3) |
| North Carolina | 1 year — URGENT | N.C.G.S.A. § 1-54(3) |
| North Dakota | 2 years | N.D.C.C. § 28-01-18(1) |
| Ohio | 1 year — URGENT | O.R.C.A. § 2305.11(A) |
| Oklahoma | 1 year — URGENT | Okla. Stat. Tit. 12, § 95(A)(4) |
| Oregon | 1 year — URGENT | O.R.S. § 12.120 |
| Pennsylvania | 1 year — URGENT | 42 P.S. § 5523(1) |
| Rhode Island | 3 years | R.I.G.L. § 9-1-14(a)One of the longest in the nation. |
| South Carolina | 2 years | S.C. Code § 15-3-550 |
| South Dakota | 2 years | S.D.C.L. § 15-2-15(1) |
| Tennessee | 1 year — URGENT | T.C.A. § 28-3-103⚠️ Slander only 6 months (T.C.A. § 28-3-103). Libel: 1 year. |
| Texas | 1 year — URGENT | Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 16.002(a) |
| Utah | 1 year — URGENT | U.C.A. § 78B-2-302(4) |
| Vermont | 3 years | Vt. Stat. Ann. Tit. 12, § 512(3)One of the longest in the nation. |
| Virginia | 1 year — URGENT | Va. St. § 8.01-247.1 |
| Washington | 2 years | R.C.W.A. § 4.16.100(1) |
| West Virginia | 1 year — URGENT | W. Va. Code § 55-2-12(c) |
| Wisconsin | 2 years | Wis. Stat. § 893.57 |
| Wyoming | 1 year — URGENT | Wyo. Stat. § 1-3-105(a)(v)(B) |
Citations verified for 50 of 50 states from the Matthiesen, Wickert & Lehrer S.C. 50-state SOL chart (last updated 5/11/2026), itself sourced from state codes. Remaining states show the deadline only; citations are being verified and will be added in subsequent updates.
A statute of limitations is a legislatively-enacted deadline for filing a civil lawsuit. The purpose, recognized by courts for centuries, is twofold: to ensure disputes are resolved while evidence is still fresh and witnesses are still available, and to protect potential defendants from indefinite legal exposure for old conduct.
Personal injury statutes of limitations are set by each state's legislature, codified in the state's civil practice or limitations code, and strictly enforced by the courts. They are not federal — there is no national personal injury deadline. They are not court rules that can be relaxed for good cause. They are statutory deadlines, and missing one almost always means your case is over.
The deadline begins when the cause of action "accrues." For most personal injury cases, accrual happens on the date of the injury itself — the day of the car crash, the day of the fall, the day of the dog bite. But some claims accrue later, under a doctrine called the discovery rule. And some claims have their accrual extended ("tolled") by specific circumstances like the plaintiff being a minor at the time of injury.
For a straightforward personal injury — a clear injury on a known date — the clock starts on the date of the incident. If you were rear-ended on June 15, 2024, in a 2-year state, your deadline to file is June 15, 2026. Simple.
The complication is that not all injuries are obvious on the date they happen. A few common scenarios where the clock doesn't start on the date of the incident:
If your injury is anything other than a clean, obvious, recent event, the accrual date is something to discuss with an attorney rather than assume.
Two doctrines come up frequently in personal injury cases and are easy to confuse:
The discovery rule postpones accrual until the plaintiff discovered, or in the exercise of reasonable diligence should have discovered, the injury and its cause. It expands the time available to file. Most states apply some version of the discovery rule, especially for medical malpractice, toxic exposure, and product defect cases. The surgical sponge example earlier is a classic discovery rule case.
A statute of repose does the opposite. It sets an absolute outer limit on when a claim can be filed, measured from some triggering event other than the injury itself — like the date a product was sold, the date a building was substantially completed, or the date medical care was rendered. A statute of repose can bar a claim before the injury even occurs, and unlike the statute of limitations, it generally cannot be tolled.
The practical effect: in a state with both a 2-year statute of limitations and a 10-year statute of repose for product liability, a person injured by a defective product 11 years after it was sold has no claim, even if they file the day they discover the defect. The injury happened, the discovery rule pushes accrual to the date of discovery, but the statute of repose has already extinguished the right of action.
Statutes of repose appear most often in construction defect, product liability, and medical malpractice contexts. The general personal injury statute of limitations table above does not capture repose periods; those need to be checked separately for each state and claim type.
"Tolling" means pausing the statute of limitations clock. The clock continues to be paused for as long as the tolling condition exists, then resumes when it ends. Common tolling triggers in personal injury cases:
Courts apply tolling doctrines narrowly. The default is that the statute runs from the date of injury, and tolling is the exception, not the rule. Plaintiffs claiming tolling generally bear the burden of proving it.
Statute of limitations law is not static. Several significant changes in the last decade are worth being aware of:
The bottom line is that the deadline that applied to a similar incident five years ago may not be the deadline that applies today. Always check the current rule before relying on any number.
When a personal injury case is filed after the statute of limitations has expired, the case is described as "time-barred." Here's what that means in practice:
This is why defamation attorneys are emphatic about acting quickly. The cost of being a year early is nothing. The cost of being a day late is the entire case.
Every state, alphabetically, with deadline, code citation where verified, and any state-specific notes. Click any state name to see all civil statute of limitations deadlines for that state.
In Alabama, a defamation plaintiff has 2 years from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at Ala. Code § 6-2-38(l). All Alabama deadlines →
In Alaska, a defamation plaintiff has 2 years from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at Alaska Stat. § 09.10.070. All Alaska deadlines →
In Arizona, a defamation plaintiff has 1 year — urgent from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at A.R.S. § 12-541. All Arizona deadlines →
In Arkansas, a defamation plaintiff has 1 year — urgent from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at A.C.A. § 16-56-104. 1 year for slander; 3 years for libel (A.C.A. § 16-56-105). All Arkansas deadlines →
In California, a defamation plaintiff has 1 year — urgent from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 340(c). All California deadlines →
In Colorado, a defamation plaintiff has 1 year — urgent from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at C.R.S. § 13-80-103. All Colorado deadlines →
In Connecticut, a defamation plaintiff has 2 years from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at C.G.S.A. § 52-597. All Connecticut deadlines →
In Delaware, a defamation plaintiff has 2 years from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at 10 Del. C. § 8119. All Delaware deadlines →
In Florida, a defamation plaintiff has 2 years from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at F.S.A. § 95.11(4)(g). All Florida deadlines →
In Georgia, a defamation plaintiff has 1 year — urgent from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33. All Georgia deadlines →
In Hawaii, a defamation plaintiff has 2 years from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at Haw. Stat. § 657-4. All Hawaii deadlines →
In Idaho, a defamation plaintiff has 2 years from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at Idaho Code § 5-219(5). All Idaho deadlines →
In Illinois, a defamation plaintiff has 1 year — urgent from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at 735 I.L.C.S. § 5/13-201. All Illinois deadlines →
In Indiana, a defamation plaintiff has 2 years from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at I.C. § 34-11-2-4. All Indiana deadlines →
In Iowa, a defamation plaintiff has 2 years from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at I.C.A. § 614.1(2). All Iowa deadlines →
In Kansas, a defamation plaintiff has 1 year — urgent from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at K.S.A. § 60-514(a). All Kansas deadlines →
In Kentucky, a defamation plaintiff has 1 year — urgent from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at K.R.S. § 413.140(1)(d). All Kentucky deadlines →
In Louisiana, a defamation plaintiff has 1 year — urgent from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at L.S.A.-C.C. Art. § 3492. Pre-7/1/24; Art. § 3493.1 (2 years) after. All Louisiana deadlines →
In Maine, a defamation plaintiff has 2 years from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at 14 M.R.S.A. § 753. All Maine deadlines →
In Maryland, a defamation plaintiff has 1 year — urgent from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at Md. Cts. & Jud. Proc. Code § 5-105. All Maryland deadlines →
In Massachusetts, a defamation plaintiff has 3 years from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at Mass. Laws Ch. 260 § 4. One of the longest in the nation. All Massachusetts deadlines →
In Michigan, a defamation plaintiff has 1 year — urgent from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at M.C.L.A. § 600.5805(11). All Michigan deadlines →
In Minnesota, a defamation plaintiff has 2 years from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at M.S.A. § 541.07(1). All Minnesota deadlines →
In Mississippi, a defamation plaintiff has 1 year — urgent from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at M.C.A. § 15-1-35. All Mississippi deadlines →
In Missouri, a defamation plaintiff has 2 years from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at Mo. Rev. Stat. § 516.140. All Missouri deadlines →
In Montana, a defamation plaintiff has 2 years from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at Mont. Stat. § 27-2-204(3). All Montana deadlines →
In Nebraska, a defamation plaintiff has 1 year — urgent from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at Neb. Stat. § 25-208. All Nebraska deadlines →
In Nevada, a defamation plaintiff has 2 years from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at N.R.S. § 11.190(4)(c). All Nevada deadlines →
In New Hampshire, a defamation plaintiff has 3 years from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at N.H. Stat. Ann. § 508:4. One of the longest in the nation. All New Hampshire deadlines →
In New Jersey, a defamation plaintiff has 1 year — urgent from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at N.J.S.A. § 2A:14-3. All New Jersey deadlines →
In New Mexico, a defamation plaintiff has 3 years from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at N.M.S.A. § 37-1-8. One of the longest in the nation. All New Mexico deadlines →
In New York, a defamation plaintiff has 1 year — urgent from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 215(3). All New York deadlines →
In North Carolina, a defamation plaintiff has 1 year — urgent from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at N.C.G.S.A. § 1-54(3). All North Carolina deadlines →
In North Dakota, a defamation plaintiff has 2 years from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at N.D.C.C. § 28-01-18(1). All North Dakota deadlines →
In Ohio, a defamation plaintiff has 1 year — urgent from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at O.R.C.A. § 2305.11(A). All Ohio deadlines →
In Oklahoma, a defamation plaintiff has 1 year — urgent from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at Okla. Stat. Tit. 12, § 95(A)(4). All Oklahoma deadlines →
In Oregon, a defamation plaintiff has 1 year — urgent from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at O.R.S. § 12.120. All Oregon deadlines →
In Pennsylvania, a defamation plaintiff has 1 year — urgent from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at 42 P.S. § 5523(1). All Pennsylvania deadlines →
In Rhode Island, a defamation plaintiff has 3 years from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at R.I.G.L. § 9-1-14(a). One of the longest in the nation. All Rhode Island deadlines →
In South Carolina, a defamation plaintiff has 2 years from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at S.C. Code § 15-3-550. All South Carolina deadlines →
In South Dakota, a defamation plaintiff has 2 years from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at S.D.C.L. § 15-2-15(1). All South Dakota deadlines →
In Tennessee, a defamation plaintiff has 1 year — urgent from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at T.C.A. § 28-3-103. ⚠️ Slander only 6 months (T.C.A. § 28-3-103). Libel: 1 year. All Tennessee deadlines →
In Texas, a defamation plaintiff has 1 year — urgent from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 16.002(a). All Texas deadlines →
In Utah, a defamation plaintiff has 1 year — urgent from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at U.C.A. § 78B-2-302(4). All Utah deadlines →
In Vermont, a defamation plaintiff has 3 years from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at Vt. Stat. Ann. Tit. 12, § 512(3). One of the longest in the nation. All Vermont deadlines →
In Virginia, a defamation plaintiff has 1 year — urgent from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at Va. St. § 8.01-247.1. All Virginia deadlines →
In Washington, a defamation plaintiff has 2 years from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at R.C.W.A. § 4.16.100(1). All Washington deadlines →
In West Virginia, a defamation plaintiff has 1 year — urgent from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at W. Va. Code § 55-2-12(c). All West Virginia deadlines →
In Wisconsin, a defamation plaintiff has 2 years from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at Wis. Stat. § 893.57. All Wisconsin deadlines →
In Wyoming, a defamation plaintiff has 1 year — urgent from the date of first publication to file suit. Codified at Wyo. Stat. § 1-3-105(a)(v)(B). All Wyoming deadlines →
If you believe you have a defamation (libel & slander) claim and you're reading this page trying to figure out the deadline, the practical answer is: contact an attorney now, not later. Three reasons.
First, the consultation is free. Defamation (Libel & Slander) attorneys almost universally offer free initial consultations and work on contingency — meaning their fee is a percentage of any recovery, with no recovery meaning no fee. There is no financial barrier to getting a professional opinion on your case.
Second, the deadline is harder to determine than it looks. The general rule on this page is a starting point. Whether the discovery rule applies, whether your defendant is a government entity (which often requires a separate notice of claim with a much shorter deadline), whether tolling applies, whether a statute of repose creates an outer limit you haven't considered — these are not questions you can answer from a chart. They require an attorney looking at the specific facts of your case.
Third, evidence degrades. Even if the deadline is two years away, witnesses move, memories fade, surveillance footage is overwritten, and physical evidence is repaired or discarded. Cases get harder to prove the longer they sit. The window for collecting strong evidence is usually much shorter than the window for filing.