Wrongful DeathUpdated March 2026

Lost a Loved One Due to Someone Else's Negligence?

We're sorry you're here. If your family member died because of a car crash, a medical error, a workplace accident, or any other act of negligence in the Dallas–Fort Worth area, Texas law gives you the right to hold the responsible party accountable. Dallas recorded approximately 210 fatal crashes in 2024, and Fort Worth recorded 116 traffic deaths that same year. Here's what you need to know.

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Key Takeaways

  • Secure the death certificate, police report, and hospital records from the final treatment as soon as possible — these documents become harder to access over time and are the foundation of any wrongful death claim.
  • Texas has a strict 2-year statute of limitations for wrongful death claims, running from the date of death (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 16.003) — claims against government entities require formal written notice within just 6 months (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 101.101).
  • Under Texas's modified comparative negligence rule (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 33.001), if the deceased is found 51% or more at fault, the family recovers nothing — the defense will aggressively try to shift blame to someone who can't tell their side.
  • Dallas recorded approximately 210 fatal crashes in 2024 with a fatal crash rate of 15.77 per 100,000 residents — the highest in the state — while Fort Worth had 12,865 total crashes with 116 deaths.
  • Texas has no cap on economic or non-economic damages in most wrongful death cases — unlike many states, your family's compensation is based on the full extent of the loss.
  • Most wrongful death attorneys in DFW work on contingency with free consultations — the surviving spouse, children, or parents of the deceased can file under Texas law (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 71.004).
1

Take Care of Your Family First

Nothing in this guide is more urgent than your own wellbeing and your family's. Grief doesn't follow a schedule, and the legal process will wait for you to be ready. There are deadlines you'll need to meet — we'll cover those — but none of them require you to act today or this week.

That said, a few practical things become time-sensitive in the weeks after a death. Securing the death certificate, arranging the funeral, and notifying insurance companies all need to happen relatively soon. If your loved one died in an accident, request the police report and any hospital records from the final treatment now, while they're still easily accessible.

If you're overwhelmed and don't know where to start legally, that's okay. Reading this page is a reasonable first step. The rest can happen when you're ready.

2

Understand What 'Wrongful Death' Means Under Texas Law

A wrongful death claim exists when someone dies because of another party's wrongful act, neglect, carelessness, unskillfulness, or default — and the person who died would have had the right to file a personal injury lawsuit if they had survived (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 71.002).

In plain terms: if the death was caused by something that would have been grounds for a lawsuit had the person lived, the family can pursue a wrongful death claim instead. The legal theory is the same — negligence, recklessness, or intentional harm — but the claim belongs to the survivors rather than the person who was injured.

Wrongful death claims in DFW most commonly arise from fatal car, truck, and motorcycle crashes on corridors like I-35E, I-30, I-635, I-20, and I-35W. But they also come from medical malpractice at DFW hospitals, fatal workplace accidents in construction and industrial sectors, dangerous property conditions, defective products, and commercial vehicle crashes. The DFW metro is the fourth-largest in the country, with over 8 million residents and massive daily traffic volumes. The common thread is that someone else's failure caused a death that didn't have to happen.

3

Know Who Can File a Wrongful Death Claim in Texas

Texas law defines exactly who can bring a wrongful death lawsuit. Under Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 71.004, the following family members have standing to file: the surviving spouse, the children of the deceased (including adopted children), and the parents of the deceased.

Any of these eligible family members can file individually or together. There is no strict priority hierarchy like some states — a parent can file even if the deceased had a surviving spouse, and vice versa. However, multiple claims arising from the same death are typically consolidated.

If none of the eligible family members file a wrongful death action within three months of the death, the executor or administrator of the deceased's estate may file on their behalf — unless a qualifying family member requests that the estate not bring the suit (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 71.004(b)).

One notable Texas distinction: siblings, grandparents, and other extended family members do not have standing to file a wrongful death claim under Texas law. Only the spouse, children, and parents qualify.

4

Know the Deadlines — They're Shorter Than You Think

The statute of limitations for wrongful death in Texas is two years from the date of death (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 16.003). This deadline applies regardless of what caused the death — a car crash, a workplace accident, medical malpractice, or any other negligence.

Two years may seem like enough time, but grief slows everything down, and the legal process requires gathering extensive evidence, retaining experts, and building a complete picture of your family's losses. Families miss this deadline more often than you'd expect.

For medical malpractice wrongful deaths, there is a separate 2-year statute of limitations under Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 74.251, with a 10-year statute of repose — meaning no claim can be brought more than 10 years after the medical act in question, regardless of when the death occurred.

For claims against government entities — a city bus crash, a defective government-maintained road, a public hospital error — you must provide formal written notice within 6 months of the death under Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 101.101. Missing this notice and you may lose the right to sue the government entity entirely, even if you're still within the 2-year statute of limitations.

These deadlines are firm. Texas courts enforce them strictly, even when the claim is strong and the family's loss is devastating. Don't assume you have plenty of time.

5

Understand What Damages Your Family Can Recover

Texas divides wrongful death damages into several categories, and unlike many states, there is no cap on damages in most wrongful death cases.

Economic damages include the loss of the deceased's earning capacity — the income, benefits, and financial support they would have provided over the remainder of their working life. They also include medical expenses from the final injury or illness, funeral and burial costs, and the loss of inheritance (what the deceased would have accumulated and left to their heirs). Calculating these damages often requires an economist or financial expert.

Non-economic damages cover the family's personal losses: loss of companionship and society, mental anguish, loss of care, maintenance, support, services, advice, and counsel. Each eligible family member can seek non-economic damages for their own individual loss. Texas has no cap on non-economic damages in most wrongful death cases.

Exemplary (punitive) damages may be available if the death resulted from gross negligence, malice, or fraud (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 41.003). Drunk driving deaths and deaths caused by egregious safety violations often support punitive damage claims. These are capped at the greater of 2x economic damages plus up to $750,000 in non-economic damages, or $200,000.

The one major exception: medical malpractice wrongful death claims are subject to non-economic damage caps under Texas's tort reform law (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code ch. 74). Non-economic damages are capped at $250,000 per healthcare provider, with a total cap of $500,000 for claims against hospitals.

6

Understand How Fault Is Determined

Texas's modified comparative negligence rule (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 33.001) applies to wrongful death. If the deceased person was partially at fault for the incident that killed them, damages are reduced by their percentage of fault.

If a jury awards $1,000,000 in total damages but finds the deceased was 20% at fault in a fatal crash, the recovery drops to $800,000. If the deceased is found 51% or more at fault, the family recovers nothing.

This makes the investigation into what happened critically important. Police reports, witness statements, accident reconstruction, toxicology results, and expert testimony all shape the fault determination. The defense will look hard for ways to blame the person who died — because they can't tell their side of the story. Solid evidence and experienced legal representation are what prevent that from happening.

7

Understand the Survival Action — A Separate Claim

Texas law allows families to pursue both a wrongful death claim and a survival action simultaneously. These are separate legal claims with different purposes.

The wrongful death claim compensates the surviving family for their losses — lost income, lost companionship, mental anguish, funeral costs. The survival action compensates the estate for the deceased's own suffering between the injury and death — their physical pain, their medical expenses, their mental anguish, and their lost wages during the period between the injury and death (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 71.021).

If your loved one survived for hours, days, or weeks after the injury before dying, the survival action captures the harm they personally experienced during that period. These damages belong to the estate, not to the individual family members, and are distributed according to the will or Texas intestacy law.

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

8

Talk to a Wrongful Death Attorney

Wrongful death cases are among the most complex and high-stakes claims in personal injury law. They involve detailed economic projections, expert testimony, contested liability, and Texas's specific rules about who can file, what they can recover, and how damages are calculated.

The at-fault party's insurance company will have lawyers working from day one to minimize the payout. Your family needs someone working just as hard on the other side.

Most wrongful death attorneys in DFW work on contingency — no upfront cost, and they only collect if the family recovers compensation. A free consultation helps you understand whether you have a viable claim, who should file, which deadlines apply, and what the case might be worth. DFW wrongful death cases may be filed in Dallas County (George Allen Sr. Courts Building) or Tarrant County, depending on where the death occurred.

There's no right time to call. Some families reach out within days. Others wait months. Both are fine. The critical thing is to be aware of the 2-year deadline — and the 6-month government notice requirement — and not let them expire while you're still deciding.

Dallas–Fort Worth Wrongful Death Facts

~210

fatal crashes in the City of Dallas in 2024 — the highest fatal crash rate in Texas at 15.77 per 100,000 residents

TxDOT / Dallas Police Department

116

traffic deaths in Fort Worth in 2024, out of 12,865 total crashes

Texas Department of Transportation

2 Years

statute of limitations for wrongful death in Texas

Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 16.003

No Cap

on economic or non-economic damages in most Texas wrongful death cases

Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code ch. 71

DFW's Fatal Crash Crisis

Dallas recorded approximately 210 fatal crashes in 2024, giving the city the highest fatal crash rate in Texas at 15.77 per 100,000 residents. Fort Worth had 12,865 total crashes with 116 deaths in the same year. Speed has been the leading contributing factor in fatal Dallas crashes in nine of the last ten years — responsible for 44 of the city's 108 fatal accidents through mid-2025. The deadliest corridors are the same ones that appear in every crash category: I-35E, I-30, I-635 (LBJ Freeway), I-20, and US-75 (Central Expressway) in Dallas; I-35W, I-20, and I-30 in Fort Worth. The interchange where I-30 meets I-35E south of downtown Dallas is one of the most crash-prone intersections in the region. I-635 near Skillman Street logged over 250 crashes in a recent five-year period, including 5 fatalities and 180 serious injuries. In Fort Worth, I-35W carries heavy north-south freight traffic and was the site of a catastrophic 133-vehicle pileup in February 2021 during an ice storm that killed 6 people. Alcohol-related crashes account for approximately 16% of all traffic fatalities in Dallas. For families who've lost someone on DFW's roads, a wrongful death claim is about accountability.

Workplace and Industrial Wrongful Death in DFW

The DFW metro has a massive construction and logistics footprint. Dallas and Fort Worth are among the fastest-growing metro areas in the country, with constant residential and commercial construction. DFW International Airport is one of the busiest in the world, and the region's warehousing and distribution sector employs hundreds of thousands. Fatal workplace accidents in DFW commonly involve construction falls, equipment malfunctions, trench collapses, and heavy machinery incidents. Texas is unique in that private employers can opt out of the workers' compensation system entirely (Tex. Lab. Code Title 5). An employer that opts out is called a 'non-subscriber,' and non-subscribers lose important legal protections: they cannot use the fellow-employee defense, assumption-of-risk defense, or contributory negligence defense. This means if your family member was killed on the job at a non-subscriber employer, your wrongful death claim against the employer is significantly stronger. Always verify whether the employer carried workers' comp coverage at the time of the death. If they did, your options may be limited to workers' comp death benefits unless a third party (equipment manufacturer, subcontractor, property owner) was also at fault.

Who Can Recover — and Who Can't — Under Texas Law

Texas's wrongful death statute (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 71.004) limits who can file to three categories: surviving spouse, children (including adopted children), and parents of the deceased. Each eligible family member can seek damages for their own individual losses — a surviving spouse's loss of companionship is separate from a child's loss of a parent, and each is compensable. There is no strict priority order among these categories; any qualifying member can file, and multiple members typically file together. Siblings, grandparents, step-parents (who have not legally adopted), and other extended family members do not have standing to file a wrongful death claim under Texas law — regardless of how close the relationship was. If no spouse, child, or parent files within three months, the estate's executor or administrator can file on the family's behalf. DFW wrongful death cases are filed in either Dallas County or Tarrant County depending on where the death occurred. Dallas County civil cases go through the George Allen Sr. Courts Building, while Tarrant County cases are handled through the Tim Curry Criminal Justice Center complex in Fort Worth. Both counties carry heavy civil dockets, which can affect case timeline and strategy.

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Wrongful Death FAQ — Dallas–Fort Worth & Texas

Two years from the date of death (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 16.003). This applies regardless of the cause of death. Medical malpractice wrongful deaths follow the same 2-year deadline under § 74.251, with a 10-year statute of repose. Claims against government entities require formal written notice within just 6 months (§ 101.101).

The surviving spouse, children (including adopted children), and parents of the deceased (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 71.004). Any of these can file individually or together. If none of them files within three months of the death, the estate's executor or administrator may file on their behalf. Siblings, grandparents, and extended family do not have standing under Texas law.

In most wrongful death cases, no. Texas has no cap on economic damages (lost income, medical bills, funeral costs) or non-economic damages (mental anguish, loss of companionship) in standard negligence wrongful death cases. The exception is medical malpractice: non-economic damages are capped at $250,000 per provider and $500,000 total against hospitals under Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code ch. 74.

Texas's modified comparative negligence rule (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 33.001) applies. Damages are reduced by the deceased's percentage of fault. At 51% or more fault attributed to the deceased, the family gets nothing. Defense attorneys routinely try to shift blame to the deceased because they cannot testify in their own defense.

A wrongful death claim compensates the surviving family for their losses — lost income, lost companionship, mental anguish, funeral costs. A survival action (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 71.021) compensates the estate for the deceased's own suffering between the injury and death — their pain, their medical costs, their lost wages during that period. Both can be filed together.

It depends on whether the employer carried workers' compensation insurance. If they did, your options may be limited to workers' comp death benefits unless a third party was also at fault. If the employer was a 'non-subscriber' (opted out of workers' comp, which is legal in Texas), you can file a wrongful death lawsuit directly against the employer — and the employer loses several key legal defenses.

Yes. Texas allows exemplary (punitive) damages when the death resulted from gross negligence, malice, or fraud (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 41.003). These are capped at the greater of 2x economic damages plus up to $750,000 in non-economic damages, or $200,000 (§ 41.008). Drunk driving deaths and deaths caused by egregious safety violations often support punitive damage claims.

Yes. The family or estate can recover reasonable funeral and burial expenses as part of the wrongful death claim. These are classified as economic damages and are not subject to any cap.

It depends on complexity. Clear-liability cases — like a confirmed drunk driving death or a workplace death with documented safety violations — may settle in 6 to 12 months. Complex cases with disputed fault, multiple defendants, or medical malpractice elements can take 2 to 3 years or longer. Both Dallas County and Tarrant County civil courts carry heavy dockets, so cases that go to trial may face scheduling delays.

DFW spans two primary counties: Dallas County (covering Dallas and eastern suburbs) and Tarrant County (covering Fort Worth, Arlington, and western suburbs). The county where the fatal incident occurred determines which court system handles your case. Dallas County civil cases go through the George Allen Sr. Courts Building, while Tarrant County cases are handled in Fort Worth. Your attorney can determine the correct jurisdiction and file accordingly.

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