Been Bitten by a Dog in Columbus?
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Key Takeaways
- Seek medical treatment within 24 hours even for seemingly minor puncture wounds — dog bites introduce bacteria deep into tissue and carry a high risk of infection including cellulitis and sepsis.
- Ohio’s statute of limitations gives you two years from the date of the bite to file a personal injury lawsuit (Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.10), and the comparative fault rule (Ohio Rev. Code § 2315.33) can apply if the owner claims you provoked the dog.
- Ohio has statutory strict liability for dog bites under Ohio Rev. Code § 955.28(B) — the owner is liable regardless of whether they knew the dog was dangerous, with no “one-bite rule” protection.
- Report the bite to Franklin County Animal Control or the Columbus Division of Police at (614) 645-4545 to create an official record, trigger rabies verification, and document any prior bite history for the dog.
- The dog owner’s homeowner’s or renter’s insurance typically covers bite injuries, but insurers will still try to argue you provoked the dog or were trespassing — the burden of proving these defenses falls on the owner.
- Most personal injury attorneys offer free consultations and work on contingency, and an experienced attorney can document the full extent of injuries including scarring, disfigurement, and emotional trauma such as PTSD.
Get to safety and assess your injuries
If you’ve been bitten, your first priority is getting away from the dog and to a safe location. Dog bites can range from minor puncture wounds to severe lacerations, crush injuries, and disfiguring facial injuries. Children are especially vulnerable to serious dog bite injuries.
If the bite is deep, bleeding heavily, on the face or neck, or showing signs of tissue damage, call 911 or go directly to an emergency room. For less severe bites, seek medical attention within 24 hours — even superficial puncture wounds carry a high risk of infection.
Get medical treatment — infection risk is serious
Dog bites introduce bacteria deep into tissue, creating a high risk of infection. Even bites that seem minor can develop into serious infections including cellulitis, sepsis, or in rare cases, rabies. Seek medical treatment promptly.
In Columbus, OhioHealth Grant Medical Center, The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, OhioHealth Riverside Methodist Hospital, and Mount Carmel Health System all have emergency departments. For children, Nationwide Children’s Hospital is a nationally ranked facility for pediatric trauma and reconstructive care.
Your doctor will clean the wound, assess whether stitches or surgical repair are needed, prescribe antibiotics to prevent infection, and determine whether a tetanus booster or rabies post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) is necessary based on the dog’s vaccination status.
Keep all medical records, bills, and prescriptions. Photograph your injuries on the day of the bite and daily thereafter to document how they heal (or don’t).
Identify the dog and its owner
If you don’t already know, identify the dog and its owner as quickly as possible. Get the owner’s name, address, phone number, and homeowner’s or renter’s insurance information. Ask whether the dog is current on its rabies vaccination.
If the dog is a stray or the owner is unknown, note the dog’s breed, size, color, and any distinguishing features. Note the exact location where the bite occurred.
If the owner is present, take a photo of the dog if you can do so safely. If there are witnesses, get their names and phone numbers.
Report the bite to Columbus animal control
Dog bites should be reported to Franklin County Animal Control or the Columbus Division of Police, depending on where the incident occurred. Animal control will investigate the bite, verify the dog’s rabies vaccination status, and may impose a quarantine on the animal.
In Columbus and Franklin County, contact Franklin County Animal Control to file a report. If the bite occurred within Columbus city limits, you can also report it to CPD’s non-emergency line at (614) 645-4545. If the dog was aggressive or attacked unprovoked, this documentation strengthens any legal claim and helps protect others in the community.
Filing a report creates an official record of the incident. If the dog has bitten before, prior reports strengthen your case.
Document everything
In addition to medical records and photos of your injuries, document: the location where the bite occurred (photograph it), any “Beware of Dog” signs or lack of fencing, the circumstances that led to the bite, witness contact information, any communication with the dog’s owner, and your symptoms and recovery over time.
If the bite happened on the owner’s property, photograph the property — the fencing (or lack thereof), the gate (open or closed), and any signs. This evidence is relevant to the owner’s negligence.
Understand Ohio’s strict liability dog bite law
This is important: Ohio has statutory strict liability for dog bite injuries under Ohio Rev. Code § 955.28(B). This means the dog’s owner is liable for injuries caused by their dog regardless of whether they knew the dog was dangerous. You do not need to prove the owner was negligent or that the dog had a history of aggression.
This is a significant advantage for dog bite victims in Ohio. Unlike states that follow a “one-bite rule” — where the owner gets a pass on the first bite — Ohio holds owners responsible from the first incident.
The exceptions are limited: if the victim was trespassing, teasing, tormenting, or abusing the dog at the time of the bite, the owner may have a defense. But the burden is on the owner to prove the exception applies.
Additionally, owners can face criminal liability for failure to confine a dangerous or vicious dog under Ohio Rev. Code § 955.22.
Know Ohio’s 2-year statute of limitations
Under Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.10, you have two years from the date of the dog bite to file a personal injury lawsuit. For children, the statute of limitations may be extended, but you should consult an attorney to understand how this applies to your specific situation.
Ohio’s modified comparative fault rule (Ohio Rev. Code § 2315.33) can apply if the owner argues you provoked the dog or were partially at fault. If you’re found 51% or more at fault, you recover nothing.
Consider talking to a personal injury attorney
Dog bite cases in Ohio benefit from the state’s strict liability statute, but the dog owner’s insurance company will still try to minimize your claim. They’ll argue you provoked the dog, that your injuries are minor, or that you were trespassing. An experienced attorney can counter these defenses, document the full extent of your injuries (including scarring and emotional trauma), negotiate with the homeowner’s insurance company, and fight for fair compensation.
Most personal injury attorneys offer free consultations and work on contingency — you pay nothing unless they recover compensation for you.