Skip to main content

Medical Malpractice Claim: Step-by-Step Timeline

A detailed timeline of a medical malpractice lawsuit from discovering the injury through expert review, litigation, and resolution — one of the longest and most complex personal injury case types.

Average Duration2 – 5 years
Phases8

8 phases — from incident to resolution

  1. 1

    Injury Discovery

    Day 1

    You discover that a healthcare provider's negligence caused you harm — a surgical error, missed diagnosis, medication error, or birth injury. The statute of limitations clock typically begins running from the date you knew or should have known of the injury.

    • The statute of limitations for medical malpractice is typically 2 – 3 years but varies by state.
    • Request all medical records related to the procedure or treatment immediately.
    • Do not sign any releases or waivers from the medical provider.
  2. 2

    Medical Records Collection

    Weeks 1 – 4

    Your attorney requests complete medical records from all treating providers, hospitals, and facilities involved. Medical records in malpractice cases are extensive and may take weeks to compile. A thorough records review is the foundation of expert analysis.

    • Request records from every provider involved — gaps in records can harm your case.
    • Obtain records in their original, unaltered format — alterations to records are a serious issue.
    • Keep personal copies of all records in a secure location.
  3. 3

    Expert Review & Certificate of Merit

    Months 2 – 6

    A qualified medical expert in the same specialty reviews your records and renders an opinion on whether the standard of care was breached. Many states require a Certificate of Merit — a sworn statement from a medical expert — before a malpractice lawsuit can even be filed.

    • Retaining the right expert is critical — they must be qualified in the specific medical specialty.
    • Expert review is expensive but mandatory — underresourced cases fail at this stage.
    • The expert's opinion on standard of care and causation forms the backbone of your case.
  4. 4

    Pre-Suit Notice & Investigation

    Months 3 – 8

    Many states require pre-suit notice to the defendant healthcare provider before filing, along with a mandatory waiting period during which informal resolution may occur. Your attorney continues investigation, retaining causation and damages experts.

    • Pre-suit notice deadlines vary significantly by state — your attorney must track these carefully.
    • Some cases resolve during the pre-suit period without formal litigation.
    • Life care planners and economic experts quantify future damages during this phase.
  5. 5

    Lawsuit Filing & Discovery

    Months 6 – 24

    Your attorney files the lawsuit. Discovery begins — written interrogatories, document requests, and depositions of the defendant physicians, nurses, hospital administrators, and expert witnesses. Discovery in malpractice cases is extensive and time-consuming.

    • Discovery takes 12 – 24 months in complex malpractice cases.
    • Depositions of defendant doctors are pivotal — your attorney will prepare thoroughly.
    • Your own deposition will be taken — preparation is essential.
  6. 6

    Expert Depositions & Motions

    Months 18 – 36

    Plaintiff and defense experts are deposed. Dispositive motions may be filed, including motions to exclude expert testimony. The court rules on pre-trial motions that can significantly narrow or expand the issues for trial.

    • Daubert or Frye challenges to expert testimony can be case-dispositive.
    • Pre-trial rulings may prompt settlement discussions from defendants.
    • Your attorney will prepare detailed trial exhibits and jury instructions during this phase.
  7. 7

    Mediation & Settlement Negotiations

    Months 24 – 48

    Most malpractice cases settle before trial, often during court-ordered mediation. Defense attorneys and hospital insurers apply significant resources to defend these cases. Settlement negotiations involve medical experts, life care planners, and economic analysts.

    • Mediation is confidential and frequently produces fair settlements without trial risk.
    • Future medical care costs can be the largest component of settlement in serious malpractice cases.
    • Do not accept a settlement without a full accounting of lifetime care needs.
  8. 8

    Trial or Final Resolution

    2 – 5 years total

    If no settlement is reached, the case proceeds to trial before a judge or jury. Malpractice trials are highly technical and typically last 1 – 3 weeks. Post-trial motions and appeals may add additional time before final resolution.

    • Jury selection is critical in malpractice cases — jurors' attitudes toward medicine and litigation matter.
    • Expert witness performance at trial heavily influences jury verdicts.
    • Appeals can extend the timeline by 1 – 2 additional years after a trial verdict.

For informational purposes only. Not legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney.

Other Case Timelines