LimitationCalc

Find Your Filing Deadline in 30 Seconds

Free statute of limitations calculator for all 50 US states, UK, and Canada. Know exactly how long you have — and whether tolling applies to your case.

🔒 No signup required 📍 50 US States + UK + Canada ⚖️ Updated April 2026

1 · Where did it happen?
2 · What type of claim?
3 · When did it happen?
or

Type it or pick from the calendar. Not sure? Use your best estimate — you can adjust later.

👆 Select your jurisdiction, claim type, and incident date above to see your filing deadline.

How It Works

  1. 1

    Select your state and claim type

    Pick your jurisdiction and the kind of case — personal injury, contract, defamation, and more.

  2. 2

    Enter your incident date

    Type the date you were harmed, or the date you discovered the harm. We handle the date math.

  3. 3

    Get your exact deadline

    See your filing deadline, days remaining, urgency level, and any tolling that may apply.

Recent Law Changes

Statutes change. Here are notable updates that may affect your deadline.

Explore by State

Tap any state to see its deadlines. Colors show the personal injury limitations period.

4+ years 3 years 2 years under 2 years

Browse by Claim Type

Trusted & Accurate

459+

Statute citations linked

63

Jurisdictions (US, UK, Canada)

Apr 2026

Data last verified

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is a statute of limitations?
A statute of limitations is a law that sets the maximum time after an event within which you can start legal proceedings. Once the deadline passes, your claim is usually “time-barred” — the court will dismiss it no matter how strong it is. The clock length depends on your jurisdiction and the type of claim.
What if I was a minor when the incident occurred?
Most states “toll” (pause) the clock for plaintiffs who were under 18 at the time of the incident. Typically the limitations period does not begin until the minor turns 18. Some claim types — especially medical malpractice — impose a separate cap, so verify the rule for your specific situation.
Does hiring an attorney stop the clock?
No. Hiring an attorney does not pause the statute of limitations. Only filing your lawsuit in court stops the clock. An attorney can, however, make sure your case is filed before the deadline — which is exactly why acting early matters.
What is the discovery rule?
Under the discovery rule, the clock starts when you knew — or reasonably should have known — about your injury and its cause, rather than on the date the underlying event happened. It matters most for harms that surface later, such as asbestos disease or a surgical error found years afterward. Whether it applies, and how it is measured, varies by state and claim type.
My deadline passed — is it really too late?
Not necessarily. Exceptions such as tolling (for minors, military service, or a defendant who left the state), the discovery rule, or fraudulent concealment can extend or revive a claim that looks expired. These are fact-specific, so if your calculated deadline has passed it is worth having an attorney evaluate whether any exception applies before giving up.