Slip & FallUpdated April 2026

Hurt in a Slip and Fall in Tulsa?

Oklahoma gives you two years from the date of your fall to file a premises liability lawsuit (Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 95(A)). Under Oklahoma’s modified comparative negligence rule, you can recover compensation as long as you were less than 51% at fault for the accident (Okla. Stat. tit. 23, § 13). Falls send more than 6.8 million people to emergency rooms across the U.S. each year. In Tulsa, where winter ice storms coat parking lots and sidewalks and aging commercial properties line busy corridors like 71st Street and Peoria Avenue, slip and fall injuries are a year-round hazard with a dangerous cold-weather spike. Here’s what to do right now.

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Key Takeaways

  • Oklahoma’s statute of limitations for slip and fall claims is 2 years from the date of injury (Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 95(A)). Miss this deadline and your right to file a lawsuit is gone.
  • Oklahoma uses modified comparative negligence with a 51% bar (Okla. Stat. tit. 23, § 13). You can recover damages as long as you are less than 51% responsible for the fall — but your award is reduced by your share of fault.
  • Property owners in Oklahoma owe different duties depending on your legal status: invitees (customers, shoppers) are owed the highest duty of care; licensees (social guests) are owed a duty to warn of hidden dangers; trespassers are owed almost no duty.
  • Oklahoma has no cap on compensatory damages in personal injury cases. The Oklahoma Supreme Court struck down a $350,000 non-economic damage cap in 2019 (Beason v. I.E. Miller Services, Inc.).
  • If you fell on government property — a city sidewalk, a Tulsa Transit bus stop, or a county building — the Oklahoma Governmental Tort Claims Act requires written notice within 1 year. Liability is capped at $175,000 per person and $1,000,000 per occurrence.
  • Document the hazard immediately. Photograph the wet floor, broken step, icy walkway, or uneven surface before anyone cleans it up or fixes it. This evidence disappears fast.
1

Get Medical Attention Right Away

A slip and fall can cause injuries far more serious than they initially feel. Broken wrists, hip fractures, torn ligaments, traumatic brain injuries, and spinal cord damage are all common outcomes — and many of these injuries do not produce their worst symptoms until hours or days later.

If you hit your head, cannot put weight on a limb, or feel confused or dizzy, call 911 or get to an emergency room immediately. Saint Francis Hospital in Tulsa is a verified Level I Trauma Center and the largest hospital in northeastern Oklahoma with roughly 1,100 beds — the 11th largest in the United States. Ascension St. John Medical Center also holds Level I Trauma Center designation. Hillcrest Medical Center operates as a Level III Trauma Center and provides emergency care in the central Tulsa area.

Even if you feel okay, see a doctor within 72 hours. Concussions, soft tissue tears, and hairline fractures often have delayed symptoms. A prompt medical evaluation creates a documented link between the fall and your injuries — without it, the property owner’s insurance company will argue your injuries came from something else.

2

Document the Scene Before It Changes

Evidence at a slip and fall scene disappears quickly. Spills get mopped, ice gets salted, broken stairs get repaired. If you are physically able, pull out your phone and start photographing everything before anyone touches it.

Photograph the exact spot where you fell. Capture the hazard itself — the puddle, the ice patch, the cracked tile, the missing handrail, the torn carpet. Photograph it from multiple angles. Get wide shots of the surrounding area to show lighting conditions, the presence or absence of warning signs, and any obstructions. If your fall happened outdoors, capture the weather conditions.

Look for security cameras. Many Tulsa businesses, parking lots, and public buildings have surveillance systems. Ask the property manager if cameras recorded the area where you fell. Surveillance footage can be overwritten within days, so make this request immediately. If you think you may file a claim, an attorney can send a preservation letter to prevent the footage from being destroyed.

3

Report the Incident to the Property Owner or Manager

Tell the property owner, store manager, or building maintenance staff what happened. Ask them to create a written incident report. Get a copy of the report or at minimum write down the name, title, and contact information of the person you reported it to.

When you describe what happened, stick to the facts: where you were, what you slipped or tripped on, and how you fell. Do not speculate about whether you should have been more careful. Do not say you are fine. Do not apologize.

If the fall happened in a store, restaurant, or commercial property, the business likely has a standard incident report process. Cooperate with it, but do not sign any documents that say you are releasing the property owner from liability. If they pressure you to sign something that looks like a waiver or release, decline and tell them you need to review it with an attorney first.

4

Collect Witness Information

If anyone saw your fall, get their full name and phone number before they leave. Witness testimony can be decisive in premises liability cases, especially when the property owner claims they did not know about the hazard or that you caused your own fall.

Ask witnesses what they saw. Did they notice the spill or ice before you fell? Had they complained about the hazard to staff? Did they see a wet floor sign or any warning? These details matter because Oklahoma law requires you to prove the property owner knew or should have known about the dangerous condition.

If other people have fallen in the same spot, that pattern of prior incidents is powerful evidence that the property owner knew about the hazard and failed to fix it. Ask witnesses if they have seen anyone else slip or trip in the same area.

5

Understand Oklahoma’s Premises Liability Rules

Oklahoma follows a traditional classification system for premises liability. The duty a property owner owes you depends on your legal status when you entered the property. If you were an invitee — a customer shopping at a store, a patient visiting a clinic, a diner at a restaurant — the property owner owes you the highest duty: to use ordinary care to keep the premises reasonably safe and to warn you of known hazards.

If you were a licensee — a social guest or someone on the property with permission but not for the owner’s commercial benefit — the owner only has a duty to warn you about hidden dangers they actually know about. They do not have to inspect the property for hazards on your behalf.

To win a premises liability claim in Oklahoma, you generally need to show: the property had a dangerous condition, the owner knew or should have known about it, the owner failed to fix it or warn visitors, and the dangerous condition caused your fall and injuries. An ice-covered sidewalk that the property owner knew about for hours without salting, a leaking pipe that created a puddle in a grocery aisle, or a broken stair railing that had been reported but never repaired — these are the kinds of situations where liability often attaches.

6

Watch for Common Insurance Company Tactics

The property owner’s insurance company will contact you. Their adjuster will sound sympathetic and helpful. Their goal is to settle your claim for as little as possible — ideally before you know how serious your injuries are.

They may ask for a recorded statement early on. You are not required to give one. Anything you say can be used to argue you were mostly at fault for the fall. They may also request broad access to your medical records, looking for pre-existing conditions they can blame your injuries on. Provide only the records directly related to this incident.

Oklahoma’s 51% comparative fault bar gives the insurance company a clear strategy: convince a jury (or you) that you were more than half responsible for your fall. They will argue you were not watching where you were going, you were wearing improper footwear, you ignored warning signs, or you were somewhere you should not have been. Document everything that counters these arguments — including the absence of warning signs, poor lighting, and the property owner’s failure to maintain the premises.

7

Keep Detailed Records of Everything

Your claim’s value depends on the documentation you build. Save every medical bill, receipt for prescriptions or medical devices, physical therapy invoice, and record of follow-up appointments. If you missed work, get a written statement from your employer documenting the days missed and wages lost.

Keep a daily journal of your recovery. Write down your pain levels, what activities you can no longer do, how the injury affects your sleep, your ability to care for your family, and your emotional state. These details are directly relevant to non-economic damages like pain and suffering, and they are hard to reconstruct months later from memory.

Save all communications with the property owner, their insurance company, and any witnesses. Screenshot text messages, save emails, and keep notes of phone calls including the date, time, and what was said. If the property owner makes repairs to the hazard that caused your fall, document those changes — they can be evidence that the owner recognized the danger.

8

Talk to a Premises Liability Attorney

Oklahoma’s premises liability rules, comparative negligence system, and government claim requirements create enough complexity that handling a slip and fall claim without legal help puts you at a disadvantage. An attorney can evaluate whether the property owner breached their duty of care, calculate the full value of your claim (including future medical costs many people underestimate), and handle negotiations with the insurance company.

If you fell on government property — a city-maintained sidewalk, a public park, a Tulsa Transit bus stop, or a county building — the Oklahoma Governmental Tort Claims Act (Okla. Stat. tit. 51, §§ 151–172) requires you to file written notice within 1 year. For city property, file with the Tulsa City Clerk. For state property, file with the Office of Risk Management. Government liability is capped at $175,000 per person and $1,000,000 per occurrence. Missing the 1-year notice deadline can bar your claim entirely.

Most premises liability attorneys in Tulsa work on contingency — no upfront cost, and they only collect a fee if they recover compensation for you. The initial consultation is free.

Tulsa Slip and Fall Facts

6.8 Million

nonfatal fall-related injuries treated in U.S. emergency rooms annually, making falls the leading cause of non-fatal injury-related ER visits nationwide

National Safety Council, Injury Facts

2 Years

statute of limitations for filing a premises liability lawsuit in Oklahoma (1 year for government property claims under the Governmental Tort Claims Act)

Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 95(A); Okla. Stat. tit. 51, §§ 151–172

51% Bar

Oklahoma’s comparative negligence threshold — if you are found 51% or more at fault for your fall, you recover nothing

Okla. Stat. tit. 23, § 13

24 Slip/Fall Calls

emergency responses for slip and fall injuries during a single Tulsa ice storm event, with 14 requiring hospital transport — illustrating the acute danger of winter weather in the metro

Tulsa Fire Department / News On 6, February 2025

Why Tulsa Has a Serious Slip and Fall Problem

Tulsa sits in Oklahoma’s ice storm corridor. While the city does not experience winter weather as frequently as northern states, when ice events hit, they hit hard — and the city’s infrastructure is not built to handle them the way Minneapolis or Chicago’s is. City officials have acknowledged that Tulsa’s winter events do not happen frequently enough to warrant the same level of street treatment funding as northern cities, which means neighborhood streets, parking lots, and sidewalks often go unsalted and untreated for hours after freezing precipitation. During a February 2025 ice storm, Tulsa Fire Department responded to 24 slip-and-fall emergencies in a single event, with 14 requiring ambulance transport. Freezing drizzle coated sidewalks, parking lots, and building entryways, freezing on contact and creating nearly invisible hazards. But winter ice is not the only danger. Tulsa’s aging commercial corridors along 71st Street, Peoria Avenue, and South Memorial Drive feature strip malls and big-box stores with crumbling asphalt parking lots, poor drainage, and inadequate lighting. The Brookside entertainment district, Cherry Street, and the Brady Arts District all draw heavy pedestrian traffic on brick sidewalks and uneven surfaces, particularly at night. Property owners throughout the metro have a legal obligation to maintain safe conditions for visitors — and when they fail to do so, they can be held liable.

Oklahoma’s Premises Liability Framework and Comparative Fault

Oklahoma uses a traditional invitee-licensee-trespasser classification system for premises liability. As an invitee (a customer at a store, a patient at a clinic, a guest at a hotel), you are owed the highest duty of care: the property owner must use ordinary care to keep the premises reasonably safe and must warn you of hazards they know about or should have discovered through reasonable inspection. Oklahoma’s modified comparative negligence rule (Okla. Stat. tit. 23, § 13) applies to slip and fall cases. If a jury determines you were partially at fault — for example, you were texting while walking or you ignored a clearly posted wet floor sign — your damages are reduced by your percentage of fault. But if your fault reaches 51% or higher, you recover nothing. This threshold is the single most important number in any Oklahoma slip and fall case, and it is the primary lever insurance companies use to reduce or deny claims. Oklahoma previously had a $350,000 cap on non-economic damages, but the Oklahoma Supreme Court struck it down in 2019 (Beason v. I.E. Miller Services, Inc.). There is currently no cap on compensatory damages in personal injury cases.

Falls on Government Property in Tulsa

The City of Tulsa maintains hundreds of miles of sidewalks, public parks including Gathering Place and Mohawk Park, municipal buildings, and the Tulsa Transit bus system with stops and transfer stations across the metro. If you fell on city-owned property due to a broken sidewalk, icy bus stop, uneven park pathway, or poorly maintained public building, special rules apply under the Oklahoma Governmental Tort Claims Act (Okla. Stat. tit. 51, §§ 151–172). You must file written notice with the Tulsa City Clerk within 1 year of the fall — not the standard 2-year statute of limitations. For state-owned property, file with the Office of Risk Management. Government liability is capped at $175,000 per person and $1,000,000 per occurrence, which is significantly lower than what you could recover from a private property owner. These shorter deadlines and damage caps make it especially important to act quickly if your fall happened on government property. Contact an attorney as soon as possible to ensure you meet the 1-year notice requirement.

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Slip and Fall FAQ — Tulsa & Oklahoma

Two years from the date of the fall (Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 95(A)). If you fell on government property (a city sidewalk, public building, or state facility), you must file written notice within 1 year under the Governmental Tort Claims Act. Do not wait — evidence like surveillance footage can be overwritten within days.

You need to show four things: the property had a dangerous condition (a spill, ice, broken step, etc.), the property owner knew or should have known about it, the owner failed to fix the hazard or warn visitors, and the hazard caused your fall and your injuries. Evidence like photos, witness statements, incident reports, and maintenance logs are critical to proving these elements.

Yes, as long as you were less than 51% at fault. Oklahoma’s modified comparative negligence rule (Okla. Stat. tit. 23, § 13) reduces your damages by your percentage of fault. If you are found 51% or more at fault, you recover nothing. The property owner’s insurance company will try hard to push your fault percentage above that threshold.

Property owners in Tulsa have a duty to maintain reasonably safe conditions for visitors, which includes addressing ice accumulation within a reasonable time. If an ice storm hit hours ago and the property owner made no effort to salt, sand, or clear the walkways, they may be liable. Tulsa does not treat neighborhood streets and commercial parking lots as aggressively as northern cities during ice events, which means hazards can persist for extended periods after a storm.

You can pursue medical expenses (current and future), lost wages and lost earning capacity, pain and suffering, emotional distress, loss of enjoyment of life, and in-home care costs. Oklahoma has no cap on compensatory damages in personal injury cases. Punitive damages may be available if the property owner acted with reckless disregard for safety.

No. Oklahoma previously had a $350,000 cap on non-economic damages, but the Oklahoma Supreme Court struck it down as unconstitutional in 2019 (Beason v. I.E. Miller Services, Inc.). There is currently no cap on compensatory damages. Government claims are the exception: liability is capped at $175,000 per person and $1,000,000 per occurrence under the Governmental Tort Claims Act.

The absence of a warning sign strengthens your claim. Oklahoma law requires property owners to either fix known hazards or warn invitees about them. If a store knew about a spill (or should have known through reasonable inspection) and failed to clean it up or place a warning sign, that failure supports a negligence claim. Photograph the area immediately to document the absence of any warning.

You are not required to, and most attorneys recommend against it. Insurance adjusters use recorded statements to find anything they can twist into an argument that you were more than 51% at fault. Politely decline and tell them you will provide a statement through your attorney.

You can file a claim, but special rules apply. Under the Oklahoma Governmental Tort Claims Act, you must file written notice with the Tulsa City Clerk within 1 year of the fall. Damages are capped at $175,000 per person. The city has a duty to maintain sidewalks in a reasonably safe condition, but you must follow the notice requirements exactly or your claim will be barred.

Most premises liability attorneys in Tulsa work on contingency. There is no upfront cost, and they collect a fee only if they recover compensation for you. The typical contingency fee is 33% of the settlement or 40% if the case goes to trial. The initial consultation is almost always free.

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InjuryNextSteps.com is a free informational resource and is not a law firm. The content on this page is for general educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Every slip and fall case is different, and outcomes depend on the specific facts and circumstances involved. We do not recommend specific attorneys or predict case outcomes. If you need legal advice, consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction. The legal information on this page references Oklahoma statutes and is current as of April 2026 but may change. By submitting information through our intake form, you consent to being contacted by a qualified attorney in your area. Attorney services are provided by independent, licensed law firms — not by InjuryNextSteps.com.

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