The civil statute of limitations for sexual assault and childhood sexual abuse has been the most actively-reformed area of American tort law since 2019. State after state has eliminated, extended, or opened temporary "look-back" revival windows for claims that would previously have been time-barred. If you were sexually assaulted or sexually abused as a child, the deadline that applied even a few years ago may no longer apply. The current rule may give you a viable claim where you previously had none.
Nine states have eliminated the civil SOL entirely for childhood sexual abuse claims: Delaware (2007), Maine (1999), Maryland (2023), Michigan (2018), Minnesota (2013), Utah (2016), Vermont (2019), Washington (2024), and Wisconsin (effective via expanded discovery rule). In these states, an adult survivor of childhood sexual abuse can bring a civil claim at any age, no matter how long ago the abuse occurred. The Maryland Child Victims Act of 2023 was among the most sweeping; it took effect October 1, 2023, and immediately opened the courts to claims dating back decades.
Many other states have dramatically extended the deadline rather than eliminating it. New Jersey now allows claims until age 55 (37 years from majority). Massachusetts and Rhode Island until age 53 (35 years). Pennsylvania until age 55 (37 years). California allows claims until age 40 (22 years from majority). Tennessee until age 33 (15 years from majority) for the most serious offenses. Oklahoma's HB 1466 (2024) extended the window to age 63 (45 years from majority).
Look-back windows are a separate mechanism. Several states have opened temporary windows allowing previously-time-barred claims to be revived for filing within a short period. California's AB 218 created a 3-year window (closed December 31, 2022). New York's Adult Survivors Act created a 1-year window for adult sexual assault claims (closed November 23, 2023). North Carolina's SAFE Child Act created a 2-year window. New Jersey, Vermont, and several other states have opened similar windows. If you've been told your case is time-barred, it may be worth a second consultation — a window may have opened that didn't exist before.
Adult sexual assault SOLs are separate from childhood abuse SOLs. The numbers on this page reflect the longer childhood-abuse statute where one exists; adult-victim deadlines are usually shorter and follow the general personal injury statute of limitations for the state. New York's 2022 Adult Survivors Act was an attempt to address this gap and revived a year of adult claims.
If you are a survivor and you are reading this, please know that the legal landscape has changed dramatically. Past barriers to civil action may no longer exist. A consultation with an attorney who handles sexual assault civil cases costs nothing in most cases (these cases are taken on contingency) and may reveal that the door you assumed was closed has been reopened. Organizations like RAINN (1-800-656-HOPE) maintain referral networks of attorneys who handle these cases sensitively and competently.
Sexual Assault statute of limitations for all 50 states, with state code citation where verified.
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.
What a Statute of Limitations Is
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.
When the Clock Starts
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:
- Latent injuries. A worker exposed to a toxic substance who develops cancer years later didn't have a cause of action on the date of exposure — they had no injury yet. The clock often starts when the disease manifests or is diagnosed.
- Discovered injuries. A surgical sponge left inside a patient is an injury from the date of surgery, but the patient has no way to know about it until imaging or a second surgery reveals it. Most states apply a discovery rule to medical cases.
- Continuing torts. Ongoing harm — like repeated workplace harassment — may toll the clock until the last harmful act, rather than starting it at the first.
- Minor plaintiffs. When the injured party was under 18 at the time of injury, most states pause the clock until the plaintiff's 18th birthday. The standard 2-year deadline then runs from age 18, not the date of injury.
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.
Discovery Rule vs. Statute of Repose
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.
Common Tolling Exceptions
"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:
- Minor plaintiff. In nearly every state, the clock is paused while the injured party is under 18. After the plaintiff turns 18, the standard limitations period begins. So in a 2-year state, an 8-year-old injured today has until age 20 to file, not age 10.
- Mental incapacity. If the plaintiff was mentally incapacitated at the time of injury (in a coma, severely cognitively impaired, etc.), most states toll the clock until capacity is restored. Definitions of incapacity are state-specific.
- Defendant absent from state. Many states pause the clock for periods when the defendant was outside the state and could not be served with process. The rationale is that the plaintiff couldn't have sued an unservable defendant anyway.
- Fraudulent concealment. If the defendant actively concealed the cause of action — hiding evidence of malpractice, lying about responsibility, destroying records — the clock typically doesn't start until the plaintiff discovers or should have discovered the concealment.
- Equitable estoppel. Less common, but where a defendant induces a plaintiff to delay filing ("we'll settle, no need to file suit") and then asserts the statute of limitations as a defense, courts may estop the defendant from raising the deadline.
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.
Recent Legislative Changes
Statute of limitations law is not static. Several significant changes in the last decade are worth being aware of:
- Florida cut the personal injury deadline from 4 years to 2 years in 2023. HB 837, signed March 24, 2023, applies to causes of action arising on or after that date. Older claims may still use the 4-year rule, but anything new in Florida is now subject to a 2-year deadline. (F.S.A. § 95.11(4)(a).)
- Louisiana doubled its prescriptive period from 1 year to 2 years in 2024. Act 423/H.B. 315, effective July 1, 2024, brought Louisiana into rough alignment with most other states. Causes of action arising before July 1, 2024 still use the 1-year period under Civil Code Art. 3492; newer claims use Art. 3493.1.
- Multiple states have eliminated the statute of limitations for childhood sexual abuse civil claims since 2019. Delaware, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Virginia, Washington, and Wisconsin have eliminated SOL entirely for these claims; many others have extended SOL by decades or opened temporary "look-back" windows allowing previously-barred claims to be filed.
- Several states have shortened or limited tolling for COVID-era delays. Many states tolled various deadlines during 2020-2021 by executive order; the rules for which claims were tolled and for how long are now being litigated. If your incident occurred during 2020-2021, the deadline may be slightly different from the standard rule.
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.
What "Time-Barred" Actually Means
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:
- The defendant must raise it. The statute of limitations is an affirmative defense, which means the defendant has to plead it in their answer to the complaint. If a defendant fails to raise it, the court does not raise it on its own — the case continues. In practice, every competent defense attorney will check the deadline immediately and assert it.
- The merits don't matter. Once the defendant raises the statute of limitations and demonstrates that the deadline has passed, the case is dismissed regardless of the strength of the underlying claim. A case with overwhelming evidence of liability is dismissed just as definitively as a weak one.
- Dismissal is with prejudice. A time-barred case is dismissed with prejudice, meaning the plaintiff cannot refile the same claim. The right of action is extinguished, not just delayed.
- The defendant's actual conduct is not at issue. The defendant could be plainly at fault — admitting liability, even — and still win on a statute of limitations defense. The deadline is about timing, not blame.
- Tolling arguments must be made up front. If the plaintiff believes a tolling exception applies, they have to plead it and prove it. The default is no tolling.
This is why sexual assault 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 survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 6 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at Ala. Code § 6-2-34. 6 years general; eliminated for childhood sexual abuse under Alabama Survivors Act (under age 19 at time of abuse). All Alabama deadlines →
In Alaska, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 10 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at Alaska Stat. § 09.10.065. 10 years from majority for felony sexual abuse of a minor; no limit for certain offenses including penetration of a minor. All Alaska deadlines →
In Arizona, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 12 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at A.R.S. § 12-514. 12 years from majority for childhood sexual abuse. All Arizona deadlines →
In Arkansas, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 3 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at A.C.A. § 16-56-130. 3 years from majority for childhood sexual abuse. All Arkansas deadlines →
In California, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 22 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 340.1. 22 years from majority (until age 40) for childhood sexual abuse. AB 218 (2020) created a 3-year revival window that closed Dec 31, 2022. All California deadlines →
In Colorado, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 6 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at C.R.S. § 13-80-103.7. 6 years from majority. SB 21-088 created revival window. All Colorado deadlines →
In Connecticut, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 30 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at C.G.S.A. § 52-577e. 30 years from majority for childhood abuse. PA 19-16 (2019). All Connecticut deadlines →
Delaware — No limit (eliminated)
In Delaware, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has no limit (eliminated) under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at 10 Del. C. § 8145. ✨ SOL eliminated for childhood sexual abuse civil claims (2007 Child Victim's Act). All Delaware deadlines →
In Florida, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 7 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at F.S.A. § 95.11(9). 7 years from majority for childhood sexual abuse, or 4 years from discovery. Eliminated for sexual battery on a victim under 16. All Florida deadlines →
In Georgia, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 5 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33.1. 5 years from majority (until age 23) for childhood abuse. HB 17 (2015). All Georgia deadlines →
In Hawaii, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 8 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at Haw. Stat. § 657-1.8. 8 years from majority (until age 26) for childhood abuse. SB 2719 (2012). All Hawaii deadlines →
In Idaho, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 5 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at Idaho Code § 6-1704. 5 years from majority for childhood sexual abuse. All Idaho deadlines →
In Illinois, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 20 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at 735 I.L.C.S. § 5/13-202.2. 20 years from majority. SOL completely eliminated for certain offenses (PA 100-0080). All Illinois deadlines →
In Indiana, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 7 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at I.C. § 34-11-2-4. 7 years from age 18 (until age 25) for childhood sexual abuse. All Indiana deadlines →
Iowa — 10 years
In Iowa, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 10 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at I.C.A. § 614.1(12). 10 years from majority for childhood sexual abuse. All Iowa deadlines →
In Kansas, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 3 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at K.S.A. § 60-523. 3 years from majority for childhood sexual abuse. All Kansas deadlines →
In Kentucky, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 5 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at K.R.S. § 413.249. 5 years from majority or discovery. All Kentucky deadlines →
In Louisiana, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 10 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at L.S.A. R.S. § 9:2800.9. 10 years from majority. Senate Bill 322 (2024) created revival window. All Louisiana deadlines →
Maine — No limit (eliminated)
In Maine, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has no limit (eliminated) under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at 14 M.R.S.A. § 752-C. ✨ SOL eliminated for sexual acts toward minors (1999). All Maine deadlines →
Maryland — No limit (eliminated)
In Maryland, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has no limit (eliminated) under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at Md. Cts. & Jud. Proc. Code § 5-117. ✨ SOL eliminated by the Child Victims Act of 2023, effective October 1, 2023. All Maryland deadlines →
In Massachusetts, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 35 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at Mass. Laws Ch. 260 § 4C. 35 years from majority (until age 53) for childhood sexual abuse. Chapter 178 (2014). All Massachusetts deadlines →
Michigan — No limit (eliminated)
In Michigan, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has no limit (eliminated) under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at M.C.L.A. § 600.5851b. ✨ SOL eliminated for childhood sexual abuse civil claims (2018). All Michigan deadlines →
Minnesota — No limit (eliminated)
In Minnesota, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has no limit (eliminated) under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at M.S.A. § 541.073. ✨ SOL eliminated for childhood sexual abuse civil claims (2013). All Minnesota deadlines →
In Mississippi, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 3 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at M.C.A. § 15-1-49. 3 years; tolled until age of majority. All Mississippi deadlines →
In Missouri, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 10 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at Mo. Rev. Stat. § 537.046. 10 years from majority (until age 31) for childhood sexual abuse. All Missouri deadlines →
In Montana, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 10 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at Mont. Code § 27-2-216. 3 years from discovery; effectively no SOL for victims abused as minors under HB 195 (2019). All Montana deadlines →
In Nebraska, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 12 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-228. 12 years from majority for childhood sexual abuse. All Nebraska deadlines →
In Nevada, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 20 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at N.R.S. § 11.215. 20 years from majority or discovery for childhood sexual abuse. AB 142 (2021). All Nevada deadlines →
In New Hampshire, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 12 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at N.H. Rev. Stat. § 508:4-g. 12 years from age 18 (until age 30) for childhood sexual abuse. All New Hampshire deadlines →
In New Jersey, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 37 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at N.J.S.A. § 2A:14-2a. 37 years from majority (until age 55), or 7 years from discovery, for childhood abuse. S477 (2019). All New Jersey deadlines →
In New Mexico, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 24 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at N.M.S.A. § 37-1-30. 24 years from majority (until age 42) for childhood sexual abuse. All New Mexico deadlines →
In New York, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 20 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 208(b). 20 years from majority (until age 38) under the Child Victims Act (2019). Adult Survivors Act (2022) created 1-year revival window (closed Nov 23, 2023). All New York deadlines →
In North Carolina, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 10 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at N.C.G.S.A. § 1-52(16). 10 years from majority (until age 28). SAFE Child Act (2019) created 2-year revival window. All North Carolina deadlines →
In North Dakota, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 7 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at N.D.C.C. § 28-01-25.1. 7 years from majority or discovery for childhood sexual abuse. All North Dakota deadlines →
Ohio — 12 years
In Ohio, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 12 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at O.R.C.A. § 2305.111(C). 12 years from majority (until age 30) for childhood sexual abuse. All Ohio deadlines →
In Oklahoma, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 2 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at Okla. Stat. Tit. 12 § 95(A)(6). 45 years from age 18 (until age 63) for childhood sexual abuse under HB 1466 (2024). All Oklahoma deadlines →
In Oregon, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 9 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at O.R.S. § 12.117. From majority OR discovery, whichever is later, until age 40, for childhood sexual abuse. All Oregon deadlines →
In Pennsylvania, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 37 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at 42 Pa. C.S. § 5533(b)(2). 37 years from majority (until age 55) for childhood sexual abuse. Act 87 (2019). All Pennsylvania deadlines →
In Rhode Island, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 35 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at R.I. Gen. Laws § 9-1-51. 35 years from majority (until age 53) for childhood sexual abuse. All Rhode Island deadlines →
In South Carolina, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 6 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at S.C. Code § 15-3-555. 6 years from majority OR 3 years from discovery for childhood sexual abuse. All South Carolina deadlines →
In South Dakota, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 3 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at S.D.C.L. § 26-10-25. 3 years from majority or discovery. All South Dakota deadlines →
In Tennessee, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 15 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at T.C.A. § 28-3-116. 15 years from majority for severe childhood sexual abuse offenses. All Tennessee deadlines →
Texas — 30 years
In Texas, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 30 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 16.0045. 30 years from majority (until age 48) for childhood sexual abuse. All Texas deadlines →
Utah — No limit (eliminated)
In Utah, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has no limit (eliminated) under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at U.C.A. § 78B-2-308. ✨ SOL eliminated for childhood sexual abuse civil claims (2016). All Utah deadlines →
Vermont — No limit (eliminated)
In Vermont, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has no limit (eliminated) under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at 12 V.S.A. § 522. ✨ SOL eliminated for childhood sexual abuse civil claims (2019). All Vermont deadlines →
In Virginia, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 20 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at Va. Code § 8.01-243(D). 20 years from majority (until age 38) for childhood sexual abuse. All Virginia deadlines →
Washington — No limit (eliminated)
In Washington, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has no limit (eliminated) under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at R.C.W. § 4.16.340. ✨ SOL eliminated for childhood sexual abuse civil claims by SB 5180 (2024). Effective June 6, 2024. All Washington deadlines →
In West Virginia, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 4 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at W. Va. Code § 55-2-15. 4 years from majority or discovery for childhood sexual abuse. All West Virginia deadlines →
Wisconsin — No limit (eliminated)
In Wisconsin, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has no limit (eliminated) under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at Wis. Stat. § 893.587. ✨ SOL effectively eliminated for childhood sexual abuse civil claims via expanded discovery rule. All Wisconsin deadlines →
In Wyoming, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse has 8 years under current law to file a civil action; adult-victim SOLs typically follow the general personal injury statute. Codified at Wyo. Stat. § 1-3-105(b). 8 years from majority for childhood sexual abuse. All Wyoming deadlines →
When to Consult an Attorney
If you believe you have a sexual assault 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. Sexual Assault 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.
Free, no-obligation consultation from a licensed sexual assault attorney in your state.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is the statute of limitations for sexual assault?
The statute of limitations for sexual assault sets a legal deadline by which a plaintiff must file a civil lawsuit. The exact deadline varies by state, from as short as 1 year (Kentucky, Tennessee) to as long as 6 years (Maine, Minnesota, North Dakota). The deadline is set by each state's legislature and is strictly enforced by courts.
When does the statute of limitations start running?
For most sexual assault claims, the clock starts on the date of the incident or injury. However, some claims use a "discovery rule" — the clock starts when the plaintiff discovered, or reasonably should have discovered, the harm. The discovery rule is most common in medical malpractice, fraud, and sexual abuse cases.
What happens if I file after the statute of limitations expires?
If a lawsuit is filed after the statute of limitations has expired, the defendant can raise the deadline as an affirmative defense and the court will almost certainly dismiss the case — regardless of the strength of the underlying claim. Courts have very limited discretion to revive time-barred claims.
What is the difference between a statute of limitations and a statute of repose?
A statute of limitations starts when the cause of action accrues (typically the date of injury or discovery). A statute of repose starts from a different triggering event — like the date a product was sold or a building was substantially completed — and bars suit after a fixed period regardless of when the injury occurred.
Can the statute of limitations be paused or extended?
Yes, through "tolling" doctrines. Common tolling triggers include: the plaintiff was a minor at the time of injury, the plaintiff was legally incapacitated, the defendant was outside the state, or the defendant fraudulently concealed the cause of action. Courts apply tolling narrowly.