Ohio · Wrongful Death

Ohio Wrongful
Death Calculator

Understand wrongful death damages available in Ohio.

8 min readReviewed by the Made for Law editorial team
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2 yrSOL (PI)
88Counties
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Estimate your Ohio Wrongful Death

Understand wrongful death damages available in Ohio.

· Data sourced from Ohio statutes and court fee schedules.

Important: This tool provides educational estimates only — not legal advice. Made For Law is not a law firm and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to any federal, state, county, or local government agency or court system. Calculator results are based on statutory formulas and publicly available fee schedules — not AI. Supporting content is AI-assisted and editorially reviewed. Results may not reflect recent legislative changes or your specific circumstances. Do not rely solely on these estimates — always verify with official sources and consult a licensed attorney before making legal or financial decisions. Full disclaimer

Quick answer

Ohio wrongful death claims must be filed within 2 years (Ohio Rev. Code §§ 2305.10, 2305.113, 2305.06).

Key Takeaways

  • Statute of limitations: 2 years to file in Ohio
  • Who can file: personal representative on behalf of surviving spouse, children, parents, and other next of kin
  • Non-economic damage cap: Non-economic damages capped at the greater of $250,000 or 3x economic damages (up to $350,000 per plaintiff) for general negligence; no cap for wrongful death specifically
  • Survival actions: available alongside wrongful death claim
Ohio at a glance

Key facts for Ohio wrongful death

SOL (PI)
2 yr
SOL (PI)
Counties
88
Counties
In depth

What drives wrongful death in Ohio

Legal office handling wrongful death claim documentation — Ohio
Wrongful Death Calculator — Ohio

Wrongful Death Laws in Ohio

Ohio wrongful death claims (Ohio Rev. Code § 2125.01) can recover lost earnings, funeral expenses, and non-economic damages — loss of companionship, guidance, and consortium — from the party whose negligence, recklessness, or intentional act caused the death.

Non-economic damages are capped at Non-economic damages capped at the greater of $250,000 or 3x economic damages (up to $350,000 per plaintiff) for general negligence; no cap for wrongful death specifically in Ohio. A wrongful death claim is a civil action, separate from any criminal charges, using the preponderance-of-the-evidence standard — meaning families can obtain financial recovery even when criminal prosecution is not pursued or results in acquittal.

The statute of limitations for wrongful death claims in Ohio is 2 years from the date of death. This is a strict deadline — if you do not file within this window, the court will almost certainly dismiss your case regardless of its merits.

In some situations, such as when the cause of death was not immediately apparent, the discovery rule may extend this deadline, but this exception is narrowly applied.

Wrongful death claims in Ohio commonly arise from motor vehicle accidents, medical malpractice, workplace accidents, defective products, premises liability (slip and fall, inadequate security), and nursing home neglect. Each type of claim may involve different procedural requirements — for example, medical malpractice wrongful death cases in many states require a certificate of merit from a medical expert before the lawsuit can proceed.

Ohio wrongful death claims are filed in the Court of Common Pleas — Cuyahoga County (Cleveland), Franklin County (Columbus), and Hamilton County (Cincinnati) are primary venues. Ohio's wrongful death statute (ORC § 2125.01) allows the personal representative to sue on behalf of surviving spouse, children, parents, and other next of kin.

Ohio's non-economic damages cap (~$250,000$350,000) applies to general negligence claims but the wrongful death statute itself does not impose a separate cap on wrongful death damages — Ohio courts have clarified this distinction. Punitive damages are capped at 2× compensatory.

Medical malpractice wrongful death requires an affidavit of merit from a qualified healthcare provider filed with the complaint (ORC § 2323.43). Ohio's 2-year wrongful death SOL runs from the date of death.

Types of Damages Available in Ohio

Ohio wrongful death claims allow recovery of both economic and non-economic damages. Economic damages include the decedent's lost earnings and benefits from the date of death through their expected remaining work life, medical and funeral expenses incurred before death, the value of lost household services and parental guidance, and the loss of inheritance the family would have received.

These damages are calculated using economic projections, actuarial tables, and expert testimony about the decedent's earning trajectory.

  • Non-economic damages compensate the family for intangible losses: the loss of companionship, comfort, guidance, and consortium (the spousal relationship)
  • mental anguish and emotional suffering of the survivors
  • and the loss of the decedent's love, care, and nurturing. Important: Ohio caps non-economic damages at Non-economic damages capped at the greater of $250,000 or 3x economic damages (up to $350,000 per plaintiff) for general negligence
  • no cap for wrongful death specifically. This cap limits what families can recover for these intangible losses regardless of how devastating the death.
  • Regarding punitive damages in Ohio: Allowed
  • capped at 2x compensatory damages
  • separate proceedings required. Punitive damages are not available in every case — they are designed to punish particularly egregious conduct (such as drunk driving deaths or willful safety violations) rather than compensate the family. When available, they can significantly increase the total recovery.
Family discussing wrongful death claim options in Ohio
Ohio wrongful death calculator

Who Can File a Wrongful Death Claim in Ohio

Under Ohio law, the following individuals may file or benefit from a wrongful death claim: personal representative on behalf of surviving spouse, children, parents, and other next of kin. The specific standing rules determine who has the legal right to bring the action and who can receive the damages awarded.

The order of priority matters. In most Ohio wrongful death cases, the surviving spouse has the primary right to file.

If there is no surviving spouse, the right typically passes to children, then to parents of the deceased. Some states also allow domestic partners, stepchildren who were financially dependent on the decedent, or other extended family members to file or receive damages.

If no eligible family members exist, the estate itself may pursue the claim through the personal representative.

When multiple eligible parties exist — such as a surviving spouse and adult children — the damages are typically distributed among them based on their respective losses. This distribution can be by agreement among the parties or by court order.

In contested distribution situations, the court considers each claimant's dependency on the decedent, their relationship, and their individual losses. All eligible parties should retain the same attorney or coordinate their claims to avoid conflicts.

Find a Ohio wrongful death attorney to coordinate the family's claim from the start.

Damage Caps in Ohio

Ohio imposes a cap on non-economic damages: Non-economic damages capped at the greater of $250,000 or 3x economic damages (up to $350,000 per plaintiff) for general negligence; no cap for wrongful death specifically. This cap applies to damages like pain and suffering, loss of companionship, and emotional distress.

Economic damages — lost earnings, medical bills, funeral expenses — are generally not subject to a cap. The distinction is critical: even when non-economic damages are capped, families can still recover the full value of the decedent's economic contributions to the household.

Punitive damages in Ohio follow separate rules: Allowed; capped at 2x compensatory damages; separate proceedings required. Even in states with generous punitive damage rules, these awards require a higher burden of proof than ordinary negligence — typically clear and convincing evidence of malicious, willful, or reckless conduct.

Damage cap laws are frequently challenged in court and occasionally struck down as unconstitutional. If a cap applies to your case in Ohio, an experienced wrongful death attorney can advise whether the cap has been recently modified, challenged, or interpreted narrowly by the courts.

Some caps also have inflation adjustments that increase the limit over time.

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Survival Actions vs. Wrongful Death Claims

In Ohio, both survival actions and wrongful death claims are available, and they serve fundamentally different purposes. A wrongful death claim compensates the surviving family for their losses — lost financial support, loss of companionship, funeral costs.

A survival action, by contrast, compensates the decedent's estate for the damages the deceased person suffered before death: their pre-death pain and suffering, medical expenses incurred between injury and death, and lost wages during that period.

The practical significance is that a survival action captures the decedent's own experience — the pain they endured, the fear they experienced, the medical treatment they underwent. If the death was not instantaneous (for example, someone who lived for weeks or months after a car accident or medical error), survival action damages can be substantial.

A wrongful death claim, on the other hand, looks forward from the date of death and focuses on the family's future losses.

In Ohio, these two claims are typically filed together by the personal representative of the estate, but the damages are calculated separately and may be distributed differently. The wrongful death damages go to the statutory beneficiaries (spouse, children, parents), while the survival action damages become part of the estate and pass according to the decedent's will or the state's intestacy laws.

An experienced attorney will pursue both claims to maximize the family's total recovery.

Attorney consulting with family on wrongful death case in Ohio
Wrongful Death Calculator resources — Ohio

How Wrongful Death Damages Are Calculated

Calculating wrongful death damages in Ohio requires projecting the economic value the decedent would have provided to their family over their remaining life expectancy. This typically involves an economist or forensic accountant who analyzes the decedent's age, health, education, occupation, earnings history, and career trajectory.

The expert projects future income streams and then reduces them to present value using appropriate discount rates — accounting for the time value of money.

Lost earnings are the largest economic component in most cases. For a 35-year-old earning $75,000 per year with expected wage growth, the present value of lost earnings through age 67 can exceed $2 million.

Benefits (health insurance, retirement contributions, Social Security) and the value of household services (childcare, home maintenance, transportation) are calculated separately and added to the total. For stay-at-home parents, the economic value of childcare, cooking, cleaning, transportation, and household management can be substantial — often $50,000$80,000 per year when calculated at market replacement rates.

Non-economic damages — loss of companionship, guidance, love, and support — are inherently subjective but no less real. Juries in Ohio consider the closeness of the relationship, the age of the survivors, the role the decedent played in the family, and the expected duration of the relationship.

These damages are capped at Non-economic damages capped at the greater of $250,000 or 3x economic damages (up to $350,000 per plaintiff) for general negligence; no cap for wrongful death specifically in Ohio, which sets an upper boundary on what the jury can award for non-economic losses. Attorneys often present evidence of the decedent's involvement in their family's daily life — coaching, bedtime routines, holiday traditions, mentoring — to help the jury appreciate the magnitude of the loss.

Frequently asked

Questions families ask about Ohio wrongful death

Edited and reviewed by our editorial team. Answers are general information — not legal advice.

What is the statute of limitations for wrongful death in Ohio?

You must file a wrongful death lawsuit within 2 years of the date of death under Ohio Rev. Code § 2125.01. Missing this deadline will almost certainly bar your claim.

Who can file a wrongful death claim in Ohio?

Under Ohio law, a claim may be filed by: personal representative on behalf of surviving spouse, children, parents, and other next of kin. The specific standing rules determine priority among multiple eligible claimants.

Are wrongful death damages capped in Ohio?

Yes — non-economic damages are capped at Non-economic damages capped at the greater of $250,000 or 3x economic damages (up to $350,000 per plaintiff) for general negligence; no cap for wrongful death specifically. Economic damages (lost earnings, medical bills) are not capped.

Can I file a wrongful death lawsuit if there are criminal charges pending?

Yes. A wrongful death civil case and a criminal prosecution are separate proceedings with different burdens of proof. You can pursue a civil claim regardless of whether criminal charges are filed, pending, or even if the defendant is acquitted criminally.

How long do wrongful death cases take to resolve in Ohio?

Most wrongful death cases take 12–36 months to resolve. Cases involving clear liability and adequate insurance may settle in 12–18 months. Complex cases with disputed liability, multiple defendants, or government entities can take 2–4 years. During this time, your family should focus on healing while your attorney handles the legal process. For national data on wrongful death and civil litigation outcomes, see the Bureau of Justice Statistics wrongful death data.

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Key statutes: ORC §§ 2113.35, 2113.36

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Legal information, not legal advice. The Wrongful Death Calculator for Ohio produces estimates based on public fee schedules and state statutes. Actual costs vary by case. For advice about your situation, consult a licensed Ohio attorney.