If you're dealing with a personal injury claim in Minnesota, the rules that apply can differ in real, practical ways from what you'd face in a neighboring state. This guide walks through how personal injury claims generally work, what Minnesota law specifically says on the points that matter most, and what to expect if you move forward with a claim or case.
Understanding Personal Injury Law
Personal injury law allows someone hurt by another person's carelessness or wrongdoing to seek compensation for medical bills, lost income, pain and suffering, and other losses. Claims can arise from car crashes, slip-and-fall accidents, defective products, medical errors, dog bites, and countless other everyday situations. The core legal question is almost always the same: did someone owe you a duty of care, did they breach that duty, and did that breach cause your injury and resulting damages?
What This Typically Covers
- Duty of care and negligence standards
- Economic damages: medical bills, lost wages, future care costs
- Non-economic damages: pain, suffering, and loss of enjoyment of life
- Insurance company claim tactics and early settlement offers
- Comparative and contributory fault rules
- Statutes of limitations and filing deadlines
Minnesota-Specific Rules to Know
Fault and compensation. Minnesota follows a modified comparative negligence (51% bar) standard. In practical terms, you can generally recover damages as long as you are found 50% or less at fault. If you are found more than 50% responsible, recovery is typically barred, and any award you do receive is reduced by your percentage of fault.
Insurance framework. Minnesota uses a no-fault or choice no-fault auto insurance system. Your own Personal Injury Protection (PIP) coverage is generally the first source of payment for medical bills and lost income after a crash, and pursuing the at-fault driver directly for pain and suffering is typically reserved for more serious injuries that clear the state's injury threshold.
Filing deadline. Minnesota generally applies a statute of limitations of approximately 6 years to most personal injury and negligence claims, counted from the date of injury in the majority of cases. This deadline can be shorter for claims against a government agency and can be paused (tolled) in specific circumstances, such as when the injured person is a minor.
The bottom line for Minnesota: Taken together, Minnesota's comparative negligence rule means the fault percentage assigned to each side will directly drive the outcome, the comparatively generous 6-year filing deadline still shouldn't be treated as a reason to delay, since evidence and witness memory fade well before any legal deadline, and Minnesota's no-fault insurance system determines which policy pays first and how much documentation you'll need up front. None of this changes the fundamentals of a strong personal injury claim — solid documentation, prompt action, and realistic expectations still matter everywhere — but Minnesota's specific rules are what will shape the practical strategy an attorney recommends for your case.
The Process, Step by Step
Seek medical care immediately
Prompt treatment protects your health and creates the medical record insurers and courts rely on to evaluate a claim. Gaps in treatment are one of the most common reasons insurers undervalue an otherwise strong case.
Document everything
Photograph the scene, injuries, and property damage; collect witness names; keep every bill, receipt, and note from a missed shift at work.
Notify the relevant insurance carriers
This may include your own auto or homeowner's policy as well as the at-fault party's liability coverage, each with its own notice requirements.
Avoid early recorded statements and quick settlements
Initial offers are frequently a fraction of a claim's real value, made before the full extent of injuries or long-term care needs is known.
Consult a licensed attorney in your state
Many personal injury attorneys offer free initial consultations and work on contingency, meaning you owe no attorney fee unless they recover compensation for you.
File suit before the deadline if a fair settlement isn't reached
Once the applicable statute of limitations passes, the right to sue is generally lost permanently, regardless of how strong the underlying claim was.
Frequently Asked Questions
As a general matter, Minnesota sets a statute of limitations of approximately 6 years for most personal injury-type claims, measured from the date of the injury in most circumstances. Certain claims — such as those against a government entity, or involving a minor — can carry different or shorter notice deadlines, so confirming the exact date with an attorney promptly is important. Missing this deadline generally bars the claim permanently, regardless of its underlying merit.
Minnesota follows a modified comparative negligence (51% bar) rule. In practice, this means you can generally recover damages as long as you are found 50% or less at fault. If you are found more than 50% responsible, recovery is typically barred, and any award you do receive is reduced by your percentage of fault.
Minnesota uses (or has historically used) a no-fault or choice no-fault insurance framework, meaning your own Personal Injury Protection (PIP) coverage typically pays initial medical bills and lost wages after a crash regardless of who caused it, and the right to sue the other driver directly is often limited to cases involving serious injury. Because no-fault rules and thresholds are amended periodically, confirming the current framework with a local attorney or your insurer is worthwhile.
Value depends on the severity and permanence of the injury, total medical costs (past and projected future care), lost income and earning capacity, the strength of the liability evidence, and applicable insurance policy limits. A local attorney can review your specific medical records and financial losses to give a realistic range.
Most personal injury claims settle through negotiation with the insurance company and never reach a courtroom. Litigation becomes more likely when liability is disputed, injuries are severe, or the insurer refuses a reasonable settlement.
Whether — and how much — you can still recover depends entirely on your state's fault rule, which is covered in the state-specific section below.
Straightforward claims with clear liability can resolve in a few months. Cases involving serious injuries, disputed fault, or the need for litigation often take a year or longer, particularly if you are still receiving medical treatment, since settling before your condition stabilizes can undervalue future care needs.
Finding Help in Minnesota
Most attorneys handling personal injury claims in Minnesota offer a free initial consultation, and many personal-injury-adjacent practice areas work on contingency, meaning you pay nothing unless they recover for you. When evaluating an attorney, ask about their specific experience with cases like yours in Minnesota courts, how they communicate case updates, and how their fee structure works before signing a representation agreement. The Minnesota State Bar's lawyer referral service is typically a reliable, free starting point for finding a vetted, licensed attorney in your area.
This overview is meant to help you understand the landscape before you speak with an attorney — not to replace that conversation. Minnesota law can carry exceptions and recent changes that aren't reflected in a general guide like this one.