New Hampshire Medical Malpractice Settlement Calculator
Estimate what a New Hampshire medical malpractice claim might be worth. No enforceable cap on an injury claim — New Hampshire's med-mal damage cap was struck down as unconstitutional. This is an estimate to understand the factors — not a prediction or an offer.
A rough estimate, not a prediction or an offer.
Medical malpractice is one of the hardest claims to prove and value. This shows how New Hampshire's damage cap and fault rule shape a rough range — actual outcomes depend on expert proof of the standard of care, the facts, and negotiation. Consult a New Hampshire medical-malpractice attorney about your case.
New Hampshire damage cap
No enforceable cap on an injury claim — New Hampshire's med-mal damage cap was struck down as unconstitutional.
Enter the medical bills and losses to see an estimated range
This estimator applies the multiplier method to your medical bills, then New Hampshire's medical-malpractice damage cap and comparative-fault rule. It does not assess whether the provider actually breached the standard of care, which is the core of any med-mal case and requires expert testimony. Most states also require a pre-suit affidavit/certificate of merit and have a short, strict filing deadline. This is not legal advice and RecordingLaw.com is not a law firm.
New Hampshire's Medical Malpractice Damage Cap
No enforceable cap on an injury claim — New Hampshire's med-mal damage cap was struck down as unconstitutional.
New Hampshire has NO cap on medical malpractice damages. The New Hampshire Supreme Court has twice struck damage caps as violating the state constitution's equal protection guarantee. In Carson v. Maurer (1980) the court invalidated the medical-malpractice-specific damage cap, and in Brannigan v. Usitalo (1991) it struck the later general $875,000 cap on noneconomic (pain-and-suffering/disfigurement) damages, holding that caps unfairly impose the burden of supporting the medical/insurance industry on the most severely injured. No statutory cap is currently in force; both economic and noneconomic damages are uncapped in NH medical malpractice cases.
Source: None in force (caps held unconstitutional; cf. RSA 508:4-d / RSA 507 history).
Deadline to File a New Hampshire Malpractice Claim
New Hampshire generally requires a medical-malpractice lawsuit to be filed within 3 years (the statute of limitations). RSA 508:4: 3 years from the act/omission, or from the date the injury is or should have been discovered (discovery rule). Minors and incapacitated plaintiffs have tolling; there is no separate long statute of repose for med-mal beyond the discovery framework, though older repose provisions were narrowed/struck. Miss the deadline and the claim is usually barred no matter how strong it is, so do not wait to talk to an attorney.
How the Estimate Works
No tool can predict a malpractice settlement. This estimator adds your economic damages (medical bills and lost wages, which are generally not capped), estimates pain and suffering with the multiplier method, then applies New Hampshire's damage cap and comparative-fault rule. The hard part of any malpractice case — proving the provider breached the standard of care — is assumed here and must be established with expert testimony. Use the pain and suffering calculator to explore the non-economic piece, or read about what different injuries are worth.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does New Hampshire cap medical malpractice damages?
No enforceable cap on an injury claim — New Hampshire's med-mal damage cap was struck down as unconstitutional.
How much is a New Hampshire malpractice case worth?
No one can tell you a number in advance. A rough estimate adds your economic damages (medical bills, lost wages) and a pain-and-suffering multiplier, then applies New Hampshire's damage cap and fault rule. The real value depends on proving the standard of care was breached, the facts, and negotiation — an attorney is the only way to value your specific case.
How long do I have to file in New Hampshire?
Generally 3 years. RSA 508:4: 3 years from the act/omission, or from the date the injury is or should have been discovered (discovery rule). Minors and incapacitated plaintiffs have tolling; there is no separate long statute of repose for med-mal beyond the discovery framework, though older repose provisions were narrowed/struck.
Are economic damages capped?
In most cap states, no — caps usually apply only to non-economic (pain and suffering) damages, while medical bills and lost wages are recovered in full. A few states (like Indiana, Louisiana, Nebraska, New Mexico, and Virginia) cap total damages instead.
Is this calculator accurate?
It is a rough estimate to show the factors that drive value, especially the cap — not a prediction or an offer. Real malpractice settlements vary enormously and depend on expert proof. Treat any number here as a ballpark and consult a New Hampshire malpractice 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. Medical-malpractice law, including damage caps, changes frequently and caps are often litigated; figures are current as of 2026-06-02. The value of a malpractice claim can only be assessed by a licensed attorney reviewing your specific facts and the medical record.