Bitten by a Dog in Dallas–Fort Worth?
Dallas ranked sixth in the nation for dog attacks on postal workers in 2024, and loose-dog bites across the city jumped 37% in early 2024 compared to the prior year. Texas law puts the burden on you to prove the owner knew their dog was dangerous — which makes what you do in the next few hours critical. Here's how to protect your health, document your case, and understand your legal options.
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Key Takeaways
- Get to safety, then seek medical attention within hours — dog bites are puncture wounds with a high infection rate that can cause serious damage beneath the surface, including torn muscle, nerve injury, and crushed tissue.
- Texas has a 2-year statute of limitations for personal injury claims (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 16.003) — miss this deadline and you permanently lose your right to compensation.
- Under Texas's modified comparative negligence rule (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 33.001), your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault — provocation and trespassing are the most common defenses owners raise, and at 51% or more fault you recover nothing.
- Dallas ranked #6 nationally for dog attacks on postal workers in 2024 with 43 incidents, and Fort Worth tied for #20 with 15 incidents — Texas ranked #2 among all states with 438 dog bite incidents that year.
- Do not accept an early settlement from the owner's homeowner's insurance before you know your total medical costs — the average dog bite insurance claim nationally reached $69,272 in 2024, but serious bites involving surgery or facial scarring can be worth far more.
- Texas follows a 'one-bite rule' — the dog owner is liable if they knew or should have known their dog had dangerous tendencies, which makes reporting the bite and documenting the dog's history essential to your claim.
Get Away from the Dog and Get Safe
Your first priority is putting distance between yourself and the animal. If the dog is still loose or aggressive, move to a car, a building, or behind a fence. Don't run — back away slowly and avoid direct eye contact if the dog hasn't been secured yet.
If someone else is being attacked, don't try to physically separate a biting dog with your hands. Use a barrier — a jacket, a bag, a trash can lid, anything between the dog and the victim. Call 911 if the attack is serious or ongoing.
Once you're safe, take a breath. Dog bites are traumatic — even a "minor" one — and your adrenaline is running. What you do in the next few hours matters for both your health and any future claim.
Get Medical Attention Right Away
Dog bites are puncture wounds. They drive bacteria deep into tissue and have a high infection rate — much higher than cuts or scrapes. Even a bite that looks small on the surface can cause serious damage underneath: torn muscle, damaged tendons, nerve injury, and crushed tissue.
Go to an emergency room or urgent care within hours of the bite. The DFW metro has some of the best trauma care in the country. Parkland Memorial Hospital in Dallas is a Level I trauma center — one of the busiest public hospitals in the nation, providing care regardless of ability to pay. Baylor University Medical Center in East Dallas, Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas, and Methodist Dallas Medical Center are also Level I trauma centers. In Fort Worth, JPS Health Network (John Peter Smith Hospital) and Texas Health Harris Methodist Fort Worth are Level I trauma centers. Children's Medical Center Dallas provides Level I pediatric trauma care for children bitten by dogs.
The doctor will clean the wound, assess for deep tissue damage, and decide whether you need stitches, antibiotics, or a tetanus booster. They'll also evaluate rabies risk — if the dog's vaccination status is unknown, animal control may require the animal to be quarantined for a 10-day observation period. If the dog can't be located, you may need post-exposure rabies prophylaxis, which is a series of shots given over two weeks.
Get the medical visit documented. The records linking your injuries to the bite on a specific date are the backbone of any claim you file.
Report the Bite to Animal Control
Where you report depends on where the bite happened. The DFW metro spans two counties and dozens of municipalities, each with its own animal control agency.
If the bite occurred within Dallas city limits, report it to Dallas Animal Services (DAS) by calling 311 or (214) 670-6800. You can also use the Dallas 311 mobile app. DAS is located at 1818 N. Westmoreland Road, Dallas, TX 75212. When you file a report, DAS will investigate and place the dog under a mandatory 10-day quarantine for rabies observation.
If the bite occurred within Fort Worth city limits, contact Fort Worth Animal Care & Control at (817) 392-1234. Their facility is at 4900 Martin Street, Fort Worth, TX 76119. Fort Worth animal control will assign a representative to investigate your complaint and create an official record.
For bites in unincorporated areas of Dallas County, contact the Dallas County Health and Human Services Environmental Health Division. For unincorporated Tarrant County, contact Tarrant County Public Health at (817) 321-4960.
This report does two critical things for you: it triggers a rabies observation period for the dog, and it creates an official government record of the bite. Under Texas's one-bite rule, proving the owner knew their dog was dangerous often depends on documented prior incidents. An animal control report is exactly the kind of evidence that establishes that knowledge. Your report also protects the next person — if this dog bites again, the documented history strengthens the next victim's claim.
Document Everything
Pull out your phone and photograph your injuries before they're cleaned or bandaged. Take photos from multiple angles, including close-ups that show the depth and extent of the wounds. Photograph torn or bloody clothing. If you can safely do so, photograph the dog and the location where the attack happened.
Write down what happened while it's fresh. Where were you? What were you doing? Was the dog on a leash? Was it on the owner's property or running loose? Did the owner say anything after the bite? Were there witnesses? Get their names and phone numbers.
Keep photographing your injuries as they heal — or as they get worse. Infections, scarring, and surgical outcomes all unfold over days and weeks. A photo timeline of your wound from day one through recovery is powerful evidence of the harm you suffered.
Save every medical bill, prescription receipt, and record of time missed from work. If you need help at home because you can't use a hand or arm, document those costs too.
Understand Texas Dog Bite Law
Texas handles dog bite liability differently from many states. Texas follows a negligence-based system often called the "one-bite rule." Under this approach, a dog owner is liable for a bite if: (1) the owner knew or should have known the dog had dangerous or vicious tendencies, and (2) the owner's negligence in handling the dog caused your injuries.
The name "one-bite rule" is misleading — it doesn't mean the dog literally gets one free bite. It means you must show the owner had reason to know the dog posed a risk. Evidence of this includes: prior bites or attacks (even if unreported), the dog lunging at or threatening people, the owner keeping the dog chained or muzzled due to aggression, neighbors or delivery workers complaining about the dog, or the dog's breed or size combined with aggressive behavior.
You can also establish liability through general negligence — for example, if the owner violated a local leash ordinance and the unleashed dog bit you, that violation is strong evidence of negligence. Both Dallas and Fort Worth city ordinances require dogs to be restrained by a leash or confined to the owner's property. A dog running at large that bites someone is a clear case of negligence regardless of the dog's bite history. Dallas Animal Services reported that of 205 dog bites in early 2024, 147 involved dogs that had owners but were wandering loose — the overwhelming majority of bites come from dogs that should have been restrained.
Texas also recognizes negligence per se when a dog owner violates an animal control statute or ordinance. If the local leash law required the dog to be confined and the owner let it roam free, the owner is presumed negligent.
Know What Damages You Can Recover
Dog bite injuries often go well beyond the initial wound. Texas law allows you to recover compensation for the full range of damages caused by the bite.
Medical expenses are usually the largest component — emergency room visits, wound care, antibiotics, surgery, reconstructive procedures, physical therapy, and any future treatment related to the bite. If the bite gets infected (which is common), the costs climb fast. The national average dog bite insurance claim reached $69,272 in 2024 — up 18% from the prior year — but serious bites involving reconstructive surgery, repeated procedures, or infections can far exceed that.
Lost wages cover time missed from work while recovering, and any reduction in your ability to earn income going forward. If a hand or arm injury affects your ability to do your job, that lost earning capacity has real value.
Pain and suffering accounts for the physical pain of the bite and recovery, plus the emotional and psychological impact — anxiety, fear of dogs, nightmares, PTSD. These are especially pronounced in children.
Scarring and disfigurement matter significantly in dog bite cases. Bites frequently leave permanent scars, especially on the face, hands, and arms. Courts take facial scarring in children particularly seriously because scars stretch as a child grows, potentially requiring multiple corrective surgeries through adolescence.
Texas does not cap non-economic damages (pain and suffering) in most personal injury cases. Your recovery is based on the full extent of your harm.
Know the Defenses the Owner Might Raise
The dog owner (or their insurance company) can raise several defenses to reduce or eliminate what they owe you.
Provocation is the most common defense. If the owner can show you were teasing, hitting, or otherwise provoking the dog before the bite, your recovery may be reduced or barred. This comes up often with children — a child pulling a dog's tail or ears may be considered provocation, though courts weigh the child's age and understanding.
Trespassing is another defense. If you were unlawfully on the owner's property when the bite occurred, the owner may argue you assumed the risk — especially if "Beware of Dog" signs were posted. However, a posted sign alone doesn't eliminate liability if the owner knew the dog was dangerous and failed to adequately restrain it.
Texas's modified comparative negligence rule (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 33.001) applies to dog bite cases. If you're found partially at fault — say you ignored warning signs or approached a chained dog that was clearly agitated — your damages get reduced by your percentage of fault. If you're 51% or more at fault, you recover nothing.
Consider Talking to a Personal Injury Attorney
Most dog bite claims are paid through the owner's homeowner's or renter's insurance policy. Insurance companies will try to settle quickly and cheaply — they know that once you understand the full extent of your injuries and the strength of your evidence, the claim is worth more. Don't accept an early offer before you know your total medical costs and whether scarring will be permanent.
Because Texas uses a negligence-based system rather than strict liability, dog bite cases here require more evidence-gathering than in states where the owner is automatically liable. An attorney can investigate the dog's history (prior complaints, animal control records, neighbor testimony), identify all applicable insurance policies, and build the negligence case you need. DFW cases may be filed in Dallas County (George Allen Sr. Courts Building) or Tarrant County depending on where the bite occurred — each has its own civil courts and docket speed.
Most personal injury attorneys in the DFW metro work on contingency — no upfront cost, and they only get paid if you recover. A free consultation gives you a clear picture of what your claim may be worth and whether the evidence supports a strong case.