- What a Statute of Limitations Is
- The Discovery Rule — The Exception That Matters Most
- Situations Where the Clock Is Paused (Tolling)
- State-by-State Reference Table (All 50 + DC)
- How SOL Works in Active Mass Tort Cases
- What to Do If Your Deadline Is Approaching
- What Happens If You Miss the Deadline
- Frequently Asked Questions
In law, time is not neutral. Miss the deadline to file a lawsuit, and it doesn't matter how strong your case is, how serious your injuries are, or how clearly the defendant was at fault. Your claim is dead. The legal term for this deadline is the statute of limitations.
For people who've been harmed by dangerous products, drugs, or chemicals — the group that mass tort lawsuits serve — understanding your state's statute of limitations is not optional. It is the single most time-sensitive aspect of your entire legal situation.
This guide explains how statutes of limitations work, how the discovery rule can extend your deadline, what exceptions exist, and provides a comprehensive reference table for all 50 states and DC.
The information in this guide is for educational purposes only. Statutes of limitations vary by the type of claim, the specific facts of your case, and can be modified by the discovery rule and tolling doctrines. Do not rely solely on this table to determine your deadline. Consult an attorney to understand exactly how much time you have.
What a Statute of Limitations Is
A statute of limitations is a law that sets a maximum time after an event within which legal proceedings may be initiated. After that time expires, the claim is permanently barred — courts will dismiss it regardless of its merits.
The rationale behind statutes of limitations is that legal disputes should be resolved while evidence is still fresh, witnesses' memories are intact, and documents are available. They also give defendants certainty that they won't face legal liability indefinitely.
For mass tort cases — which typically involve personal injury claims — the clock generally starts from one of two points:
- The date of injury — when the harm actually occurred
- The date of discovery — when you knew or reasonably should have known that you were harmed and that the harm was caused by a specific product (more on this below)
Most states use the discovery rule for latent injury cases like mass torts. This is critical, because many mass tort injuries — particularly cancer caused by chemical exposure — don't manifest for years or decades after the exposure.
In most states, the statute of limitations clock starts when you discovered (or reasonably should have discovered) that your injury was linked to a specific product — not necessarily when you were first exposed to it. This is why people who used a product decades ago can still have valid claims today.
The Discovery Rule — The Exception That Matters Most
The discovery rule is a legal doctrine that delays the start of the statute of limitations clock until the plaintiff knew — or in the exercise of reasonable diligence should have known — that they had a claim.
In the context of mass torts, this is enormously important. Consider these scenarios:
- A woman used chemical hair straighteners for 15 years, stopped in 2018, and was diagnosed with uterine cancer in 2022. She learns in 2023 that scientific studies have linked chemical straighteners to uterine cancer. Under the discovery rule, her statute of limitations clock may not begin until 2023 — when she had a basis to connect her cancer to the product — not 2018 when she stopped using it.
- A Vietnam veteran was exposed to Agent Orange in the 1960s but developed non-Hodgkin lymphoma in 2015. He learned of the connection to herbicide exposure in 2020. The discovery rule in his state might start the clock in 2020.
- A worker used Roundup herbicide regularly through the 1990s and 2000s, then was diagnosed with lymphoma in 2018 after the IARC classified glyphosate as "probably carcinogenic" in 2015. His discovery date might be around 2015-2018.
Applying the discovery rule is complex and fact-specific. Two people exposed to the same product at the same time might have different discovery dates based on when they personally became aware of the potential connection. Courts look at what a reasonable person in the plaintiff's position would have known and when.
The discovery rule does not eliminate the statute of limitations — it changes when the clock starts. And in some states, even with the discovery rule, there is an absolute outer limit (called a "statute of repose") beyond which no claim can be brought regardless of when the injury was discovered.
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Situations Where the Clock Is Paused (Tolling)
Beyond the discovery rule, courts recognize additional circumstances where the statute of limitations is "tolled" — meaning the clock is temporarily paused or stopped. Common tolling situations in mass tort cases include:
- Minority. If the plaintiff was a minor at the time of the injury, the clock typically doesn't start until they turn 18. This matters in cases like NEC baby formula, where infants were harmed.
- Mental incapacity. If the plaintiff lacked mental capacity due to disability or incapacitation, the clock may be tolled until capacity is restored.
- Fraudulent concealment. If the defendant actively concealed knowledge of the harm — as many pharmaceutical and chemical companies have been found to have done — courts may toll the statute of limitations for the period of concealment. This is a powerful tolling theory in mass torts where internal documents show companies knew about risks and hid them.
- Military service. The federal Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA) tolls statutes of limitations for active-duty military members.
- Bankruptcy stay. When a defendant files for bankruptcy, an automatic stay halts most legal proceedings, and the tolling effect may extend filing deadlines.
Whether any of these tolling doctrines applies to your specific situation is a legal question that requires an attorney's analysis. Don't assume tolling applies without getting professional guidance.
State-by-State Reference Table
The following table lists the standard personal injury statute of limitations for each state. Mass tort claims are generally governed by personal injury law. Remember that the discovery rule and tolling exceptions can modify these deadlines significantly.
| State | Standard SOL | Discovery Rule? | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alabama | 2 years | Yes | Runs from injury or discovery |
| Alaska | 2 years | Yes | 10-year statute of repose for products liability |
| Arizona | 2 years | Yes | Latent injury discovery rule applies |
| Arkansas | 3 years | Yes | Discovery rule for latent diseases |
| California | 2 years | Yes | Delayed discovery widely applied; no products repose |
| Colorado | 2 years | Yes | 3-year SOL for fraud; discovery tolling for latent injury |
| Connecticut | 2 years | Yes | 3-year repose from exposure for product liability |
| Delaware | 2 years | Yes | Discovery rule applies to latent disease claims |
| District of Columbia | 3 years | Yes | Discovery rule recognized |
| Florida | 2 years | Yes | Reduced from 4 years in 2023; discovery rule applies |
| Georgia | 2 years | Yes | Strict 2-year rule; limited discovery extension |
| Hawaii | 2 years | Yes | Discovery rule broadly applied |
| Idaho | 2 years | Yes | 10-year statute of repose for products |
| Illinois | 2 years | Yes | Discovery rule applies; 12-year repose for products |
| Indiana | 2 years | Yes | 10-year repose from first sale of product |
| Iowa | 2 years | Yes | Discovery rule recognized for latent injuries |
| Kansas | 2 years | Yes | Discovery rule applies |
| Kentucky | 1 year | Yes | One of shortest SOLs; discovery tolling available |
| Louisiana | 1 year | Yes | Prescription (SOL) runs from discovery; strict enforcement |
| Maine | 6 years | Yes | Among the longest in the country |
| Maryland | 3 years | Yes | Discovery rule applies to latent disease |
| Massachusetts | 3 years | Yes | Discovery rule broadly applied to product liability |
| Michigan | 3 years | Yes | Abolished repose for asbestos/silica; discovery rule |
| Minnesota | 2 years | Yes | Discovery rule recognized; 4-year repose for products |
| Mississippi | 3 years | Yes | Discovery rule applies to latent disease claims |
| Missouri | 5 years | Yes | 5-year SOL for personal injury; discovery rule applies |
| Montana | 3 years | Yes | Discovery rule for latent injury; no products repose |
| Nebraska | 4 years | Yes | Discovery rule applies |
| Nevada | 2 years | Yes | Discovery rule recognized |
| New Hampshire | 3 years | Yes | Discovery rule applies to latent disease |
| New Jersey | 2 years | Yes | Asbestos and toxic tort discovery rule well established |
| New Mexico | 3 years | Yes | Discovery rule recognized for latent injuries |
| New York | 3 years | Yes | CPLR §214-c for toxic exposure from discovery |
| North Carolina | 3 years | Yes | Discovery rule applies; 6-year products repose |
| North Dakota | 6 years | Yes | Discovery rule applies |
| Ohio | 2 years | Yes | Discovery rule broadly applied to product liability |
| Oklahoma | 2 years | Yes | Discovery rule recognized |
| Oregon | 2 years | Yes | Discovery rule applies; 10-year products repose |
| Pennsylvania | 2 years | Yes | Discovery rule ("discovery of injury" rule) well established |
| Rhode Island | 3 years | Yes | Discovery rule applies to latent injury claims |
| South Carolina | 3 years | Yes | Discovery rule applies to products liability |
| South Dakota | 3 years | Yes | Discovery rule recognized for latent disease |
| Tennessee | 1 year | Yes | Very short; discovery rule applies but be careful |
| Texas | 2 years | Yes | Discovery rule applies; 15-year products repose |
| Utah | 2 years | Yes | Discovery rule recognized |
| Vermont | 3 years | Yes | Discovery rule applies |
| Virginia | 2 years | Limited | Discovery rule more limited than other states; consult attorney |
| Washington | 3 years | Yes | Discovery rule applies; 12-year products repose |
| West Virginia | 2 years | Yes | Discovery rule broadly applied in toxic tort cases |
| Wisconsin | 3 years | Yes | Discovery rule applies; 15-year products repose |
| Wyoming | 4 years | Yes | Discovery rule applies to personal injury claims |
Note: SOL = Statute of Limitations. All periods listed are for general personal injury claims. Mass tort-specific claims may have different periods. Missouri's personal injury SOL was updated; consult an attorney for current status. This table is for reference only — not legal advice.
Kentucky, Louisiana, and Tennessee have one-year statutes of limitations — the shortest in the country. If you live in or suffered harm in one of these states, getting legal advice quickly is even more critical than usual. Florida reduced its SOL from 4 to 2 years effective 2023, which caught many potential plaintiffs off guard.
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How SOL Works in Active Mass Tort Cases
One common question is: "I heard there's already a mass tort lawsuit — doesn't that stop the clock for me?"
No. The existence of a mass tort MDL does not automatically extend your individual statute of limitations. You must file your own claim within the applicable deadline. Seeing advertisements for a mass tort lawsuit does not preserve your rights — only filing does.
Some courts have issued "tolling orders" that pause statutes of limitations for potential plaintiffs in specific litigations while the MDL is pending. These orders are not universal and cannot be counted on. If your attorney believes you're protected by a tolling order, get that in writing and make sure you understand what it covers.
In some litigations, plaintiffs' attorneys negotiate global tolling agreements with defendants that pause statutes of limitations for identified potential claimants during ongoing settlement discussions. These are litigation-specific agreements — they apply only to identified plaintiffs who have already been entered into the system, not to unrepresented individuals watching from the sidelines.
Never assume that a mass tort lawsuit, a news story, or an advertisement means your deadline is automatically extended. Your personal statute of limitations continues to run regardless of what happens in the broader litigation. File your own claim to protect your rights.
What to Do If Your Deadline Is Approaching
If you believe you're close to or past the statute of limitations for your potential mass tort claim, here is what to do — in order of urgency:
- Call a mass tort attorney today. Do not wait until tomorrow. If you have days or weeks left, an attorney can still file an emergency claim. Many firms can file quickly when the situation demands it.
- Gather whatever documentation you have immediately. Medical records, photographs, purchase receipts, prescription history — whatever you have, collect it now. You can complete the documentation later; what matters first is getting a claim filed.
- Don't conclude that your deadline has passed without professional verification. The discovery rule, tolling doctrines, and other legal mechanisms may give you more time than you think. An attorney's review is worth it before you give up.
- Tell the attorney everything, including what you think might disqualify you. Let the attorney evaluate your situation with full information. What you think is a problem may not be, and what you haven't thought to mention might matter.
What Happens If You Miss the Deadline
If the statute of limitations has genuinely expired for your claim — with no applicable exceptions — the realistic outcome is that your lawsuit will be dismissed. Defense attorneys file what's called a motion to dismiss on statute of limitations grounds, and courts almost always grant it.
This does not mean the defendant escapes accountability. Other plaintiffs who filed in time continue their cases. It means that you personally lose your right to compensation from that defendant for that specific injury.
There are extremely limited exceptions — fraudulent concealment by the defendant is the strongest one, and it requires specific evidence that the defendant actively prevented you from learning about your claim. This is a difficult argument to win and requires a skilled attorney to pursue.
The message is simple: act now. The cost of waiting is potentially permanent and irreversible.
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