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California Personal Injury Statute of Limitations 2026

Deadlines, exceptions, and what San Diego injury victims need to know before filing

By John Quigley · Updated April 29, 2026

⚠ Missing the deadline = losing your case. California's standard personal injury deadline is 2 years from the date of injury under CCP §335.1. Government claims have a much shorter 6-month deadline. If you're unsure of your deadline, consult an attorney immediately.

The General Rule: 2 Years Under CCP §335.1

California Code of Civil Procedure §335.1 establishes a 2-year statute of limitations for most personal injury claims, including car accidents, slip and fall, assault, and product liability. The clock generally starts on the date the injury occurred.

Missing this deadline — even by one day — almost always results in the court dismissing your case with prejudice, meaning you permanently lose your right to sue.

California Personal Injury Deadlines at a Glance

Claim TypeDeadlineLegal Basis
General personal injury (car accident, slip and fall, assault)2 years from injuryCCP §335.1
Medical malpractice3 years from injury OR 1 year from discovery (whichever is first)CCP §340.5
Claims against government/public entity6 months from injury to file claim; 6 months after rejection to sueGov. Code §911.2
Product liability2 years from injuryCCP §335.1
Wrongful death2 years from date of deathCCP §335.1
Injuries to minors2 years after turning 18 (age 20)CCP §352
Sexual assault (adult)10 years from act OR 3 years from discoveryCCP §340.16

The Discovery Rule — When the Clock Starts Later

California's "discovery rule" delays the statute of limitations when the plaintiff didn't know and couldn't reasonably have known about their injury. This commonly applies to:

Under the discovery rule, the 2-year clock starts when you knew or should have known about both the injury and its negligent cause — not necessarily when the harmful act occurred.

Government Claims Act — The Critical 6-Month Deadline

Injured by a government employee or on government property? You must file a formal claim with the government agency within 6 months of the injury under California Government Code §911.2. This applies to city buses, public schools, the County of San Diego, Caltrans road defects, and more. Missing this deadline bars your entire claim.

After filing a government claim, the agency has 45 days to accept or reject it. If rejected, you have 6 months from the rejection letter (or 6 months from the deadline if no rejection is sent) to file a lawsuit.

Common San Diego Government Injury Scenarios

Tolling (Pausing) the Statute of Limitations

Several circumstances can "toll" (pause) the running of the statute of limitations:

Medical Malpractice — Different Rules

California medical malpractice (CCP §340.5) uses a "dual deadline" rule — the earlier of:

For foreign objects left in the body (surgical sponges, instruments), the 3-year limit doesn't apply — only the 1-year discovery rule governs.

Note: California's MICRA cap on noneconomic medical malpractice damages was $250,000 for decades; AB 35 (2022) gradually raised it to $350,000 (non-death) and $500,000 (wrongful death) by 2033.

What Happens If You File After the Deadline?

If you file after the statute of limitations expires, the defendant will almost certainly file a motion to dismiss. California courts dismiss time-barred cases without reaching the merits, regardless of how strong your underlying injury claim is. The court's hands are tied by the statute.

In rare circumstances, a court may allow a late-filed case based on equitable tolling or estoppel arguments — but these are exceptional remedies, not a safety net.

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This article is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Statutes of limitations are highly fact-specific. Consult a licensed California personal injury attorney immediately if you have questions about your deadline. SDAttorneyFinder is not a law firm.