North Carolina Dog Bite Settlement Calculator
Get a rough estimate of what a North Carolina dog-bite claim might be worth, based on the medical bills, the bite location, the victim's age, and any psychological impact. This is an estimate to understand the factors — not a prediction or an offer.
This is a rough estimate, not a prediction or an offer.
No tool can predict a dog-bite settlement. This uses the common "multiplier method" plus the factors that drive dog-bite value (bite location, the victim's age, psychological impact) to show a wide range — actual outcomes depend on the facts, the available homeowner's insurance, and negotiation. Consult a North Carolina dog-bite attorney about your case.
Enter the medical bills and losses to see an estimated range
The multiplier method (pain-and-suffering as a multiple of medical bills) is a common starting point, not a guarantee, and the dog-bite factors here (location, age, trauma) are rough adjustments. Recovery is also capped by the dog owner's insurance. An attorney is the only way to value your specific claim. This tool is not legal advice and RecordingLaw.com is not a law firm.
How the Estimate Works
No tool can predict a dog-bite settlement — every case is different and the number depends on the facts, the available insurance, the venue, and negotiation. This calculator applies the multiplier method (pain and suffering as a multiple of the medical bills, about 1.5× for minor injuries up to 5× or more for catastrophic ones), then adjusts for the factors that make dog bites unique: where the bite is (facial scarring is the biggest value driver), the victim's age (young children receive the largest awards), and the psychological impact (dog bites cause outsized trauma). It then applies North Carolina's rules. The average U.S. dog-bite claim was about $69,000 in 2024, paid in most cases by the owner's homeowner's or renter's insurance — which also caps what you can collect.
North Carolina Follows a mixed rule
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 67-4.4 imposes STRICT liability, but ONLY where the animal qualifies as a statutory "dangerous dog" as defined in § 67-4.1(a)(1) (e.g., a dog that has killed/inflicted severe injury, or one previously declared potentially dangerous). For an ordinary dog that does not meet that definition, there is NO strict liability; the victim must proceed under common-law negligence or the "one-bite" scienter rule (owner knew or should have known of the dog's dangerous propensities), or under the running-at-large/intentional-injury provisions of § 67-12 and § 67-4.3. Hence the rule is mixed: strict liability for statutorily dangerous dogs, one-bite/negligence otherwise.
What a mixed rule means for you: North Carolina is strict only in certain circumstances (often depending on where the bite happened, whether the victim was lawfully present, or the type of harm) and otherwise falls back to the knowledge-based "one-bite" rule. Which path applies to your facts can change the proof you need, so the details matter.
Three things tend to push a North Carolina dog-bite case toward the higher end of the range: a bite to the face or hands (visible scarring and lost function are valued far more than a leg or torso bite), a young child victim (juries and insurers award more, and the psychological impact is treated as long-lasting), and documented psychological trauma such as PTSD or a lasting fear of dogs. Strong evidence — photos of the wound and scarring over time, the medical and therapy records, and any prior complaints about the dog — is what moves a claim from the low end to the high end. Most North Carolina dog-bite claims are paid by the owner's homeowner's or renter's liability policy, so the available coverage often sets the practical ceiling.
Provocation, Fault & the Deadline to File
Two defenses can reduce or defeat a North Carolina dog-bite claim: provocation (teasing, hitting, or cornering the dog) and trespassing (the victim was not lawfully on the property). North Carolina applies pure contributory negligence, so being even 1% at fault can bar recovery entirely.
North Carolina generally requires a dog-bite lawsuit to be filed within 3 years of the bite (the statute of limitations). N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-52(16) sets the 3-year PI limitation; the cause of action accrues when bodily harm becomes apparent or ought reasonably to have become apparent. § 1-52(5) provides the general 3-year period for injury to person or rights of another not arising on contract. A separate 10-year statute of repose bars claims more than 10 years after the defendant's last act/omission. (Med-mal has its own limitation/repose under § 1-15(c).) Miss it and the claim is usually barred, so do not wait to talk to an attorney. Source: N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-52(16) (3-year PI limitation); N.C. Gen. Stat. § 67-4.4 (dog strict liability); contributory negligence — N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-139 (burden) and common law.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much is my North Carolina dog bite claim worth?
No one can tell you a number in advance. A rough estimate adds the economic damages (medical bills, lost wages) and applies a pain-and-suffering multiplier, then adjusts for the bite location, the victim's age, psychological impact, and fault under North Carolina's pure contributory negligence rule. The real value also depends on the owner's available homeowner's insurance — an attorney is the only way to value your specific case.
Is North Carolina a strict-liability dog bite state?
North Carolina uses a mixed rule — strict liability applies only in certain circumstances, and otherwise the knowledge-based "one-bite" rule controls. See the rule details above for which path fits your facts.
Does provocation reduce a North Carolina dog bite settlement?
Yes. Provoking the dog or trespassing is a defense that can reduce or, in some states, completely bar recovery. North Carolina follows pure contributory negligence.
How long do I have to file in North Carolina?
Generally 3 years from the bite. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-52(16) sets the 3-year PI limitation; the cause of action accrues when bodily harm becomes apparent or ought reasonably to have become apparent. § 1-52(5) provides the general 3-year period for injury to person or rights of another not arising on contract. A separate 10-year statute of repose bars claims more than 10 years after the defendant's last act/omission. (Med-mal has its own limitation/repose under § 1-15(c).)
Is this calculator accurate?
It is a rough estimate to show the factors that drive value — not a prediction or an offer. Real dog-bite settlements vary enormously and are capped by the available insurance. Treat any number here as a ballpark and consult a North Carolina dog-bite attorney.
Disclaimer
This estimator is for general informational purposes only and is not legal advice or a prediction of any outcome. RecordingLaw.com is not a law firm. The value of a dog-bite claim can only be assessed by a licensed attorney reviewing your specific facts.