Delaware
Medical Malpractice Laws in Delaware (2026): Deadlines & Caps

Delaware handles medical malpractice under its Health-Care Medical Negligence Insurance and Litigation Act, and two rules drive most cases: the filing deadline and the expert affidavit. A patient generally has two years from the date of injury to sue under 18 Del. C. 6856, and the complaint must be accompanied by an affidavit of merit signed by a qualified medical expert under 18 Del. C. 6853.
This page is general legal information, not legal advice, and it is part of our Medical Malpractice Laws by State series. Because the deadlines and exceptions depend on the facts, confirm your situation with a licensed Delaware attorney.
What counts as medical malpractice in Delaware?
Delaware defines medical negligence as a health care provider's failure to use the degree of skill and care that a reasonably prudent provider in the same field would use under similar circumstances. The claim is governed by Title 18, Chapter 68 of the Delaware Code, the Health-Care Medical Negligence Insurance and Litigation Act. Physicians, surgeons, dentists, nurses, hospitals, and other licensed providers can be liable for negligence in diagnosis, treatment, or care. A disappointing result is not enough; the patient must show a breach of the standard of care that caused the injury.
The statute of limitations to sue in Delaware
Under 18 Del. C. 6856, a medical negligence action generally must be filed within two years from the date the injury occurred. Delaware ties the clock to the date of the wrongful act or omission, which makes the deadline stricter than in states that start the clock only at discovery. For most adult patients, the practical filing window is two years from the date of the negligent care.
There is a limited discovery extension. If the injury was unknown to the patient and could not, in the exercise of reasonable diligence, have been discovered within two years, the action may be brought within three years from the date of the injury. That three-year point is a firm cutoff for most adults, so the discovery rule does not open an unlimited window.
Delaware's statute of repose and key exceptions
The three-year limit in 18 Del. C. 6856 functions as an outer deadline. Even when the discovery rule applies, an adult patient generally cannot sue more than three years after the injury occurred. Delaware carves out an important exception for young children: a child who was under six years of age at the time of the injury generally has until the child's sixth birthday to bring the action, even if that is later than the standard period. A separate provision in 18 Del. C. 6853 creates a rebuttable inference of negligence when a foreign object is unintentionally left in a patient's body after surgery, which can affect how such a case is proven.

Damage caps in Delaware
Delaware does not cap compensatory damages in medical malpractice cases. There is no statutory ceiling on economic damages such as medical expenses and lost earnings, and no cap on non-economic damages such as pain and suffering. Separate statutory limits can apply to claims against state and local government entities under Delaware's sovereign-immunity and tort-claims rules, but those are not malpractice-specific caps. For private health care providers, the value of a case is set by the evidence rather than a fixed statutory number.
Affidavit of merit and expert requirements
Delaware requires expert support up front. Under 18 Del. C. 6853, the complaint in a medical negligence case must be accompanied by an affidavit of merit signed by an expert witness, with the expert's current curriculum vitae, stating that there are reasonable grounds to believe each defendant was negligent and that the negligence caused the injury. The affidavit is filed under seal and kept confidential. The expert generally must be licensed and, within three years of the alleged negligence, engaged in treating patients or teaching in the same or a similar field, and board certified if the defendant is board certified. For good cause shown, the court may grant a single 60-day extension to file the affidavit if the request is made before the limitation period expires.
Pre-suit notice in Delaware
Delaware does not use a mandatory screening panel, but it offers an optional pre-suit notice that buys time. Under 18 Del. C. 6856, a potential plaintiff can toll the statute of limitations for an additional 90 days by serving a written notice of intent to investigate on each potential defendant before the deadline runs. The notice is sent to the defendant's regular place of business, typically by certified mail, and identifies the parties and the nature of the suspected negligence. This extra 90 days can give a claimant time to obtain medical records and secure the affidavit of merit.

Comparative negligence in Delaware
Delaware follows modified comparative negligence under 10 Del. C. 8132. A plaintiff can recover as long as the plaintiff's own negligence was not greater than the negligence of the defendant, or the combined negligence of all defendants from whom recovery is sought. If the plaintiff is partly at fault, the damages are reduced in proportion to the plaintiff's share of fault. If the plaintiff's fault is greater than the defendants' combined fault, the plaintiff recovers nothing, which is often called a 51 percent bar.
Wrongful-death medical malpractice in Delaware
When malpractice causes a patient's death, the family or estate may bring a wrongful-death action under Delaware law, with its own two-year deadline under 10 Del. C. 8107, generally measured from the date of death. Delaware also allows a separate survival claim for the harm the patient suffered before death. Because the wrongful-death timeline and claimants can differ from a standard malpractice claim, identifying the correct deadline and proper plaintiff early is important.
How to evaluate and preserve a possible claim
While every situation is different and this is general information rather than legal advice, people who suspect malpractice in Delaware often begin by requesting complete medical records and writing down key dates, because the two-year clock under 18 Del. C. 6856 starts at the date of injury. An attorney typically arranges for a qualified expert to review the records, since the affidavit of merit must accompany the complaint. The optional 90-day notice of intent can extend the deadline while that review happens. Malpractice cases are commonly handled on a contingency-fee basis, and consulting a licensed Delaware attorney early helps, though no attorney can promise a particular outcome or dollar amount.

Frequently Asked Questions
What is the deadline to sue for medical malpractice in Delaware?
Generally two years from the date of injury under 18 Del. C. 6856, extendable to three years from injury if it could not reasonably have been discovered sooner. A 90-day notice of intent can add time, and children under six often have until their sixth birthday. Confirm your deadline with a Delaware attorney.
Does Delaware cap medical malpractice damages?
No. Delaware has no statutory cap on economic or non-economic (pain and suffering) damages in medical malpractice cases against private providers. Separate limits can apply to claims against government entities under sovereign-immunity rules, but those are not malpractice damages caps.
Do I need an affidavit of merit to file in Delaware?
Yes. Under 18 Del. C. 6853, an affidavit of merit signed by a qualified medical expert, with the expert's CV, must accompany the complaint and state that there are reasonable grounds to believe each defendant was negligent. It is filed under seal, and the court may grant one 60-day extension for good cause.
What is the discovery rule for malpractice in Delaware?
If the injury was unknown and could not have been discovered with reasonable diligence within two years, 18 Del. C. 6856 allows suit within three years of the injury. Three years is the firm outer limit for most adults, so the discovery rule does not open an unlimited window.
How much is a medical malpractice case worth in Delaware?
There is no set figure. Because Delaware does not cap damages, value depends on the specific evidence of medical costs, lost income, and pain and suffering, and on disputed liability and causation. No attorney can guarantee a result or a dollar amount.
What is the deadline for a child's malpractice claim in Delaware?
A child who was under six years old when injured generally has until the child's sixth birthday to bring a medical negligence action under 18 Del. C. 6856, even if that is later than the usual two-year or three-year limits.
How does fault affect my recovery in Delaware?
Delaware uses modified comparative negligence under 10 Del. C. 8132. You can recover if your fault is not greater than the defendants' combined fault, with your award reduced by your share. If your fault is greater, you recover nothing.
What is the 90-day notice of intent in Delaware?
Under 18 Del. C. 6856, serving a written notice of intent to investigate on each potential defendant before the deadline tolls the statute of limitations for an additional 90 days, giving a claimant time to gather records and secure the affidavit of merit.
Harmed by medical care in Delaware? Get a free case review
If a medical provider's negligence caused a serious injury, you may be owed compensation, but medical malpractice cases have strict deadlines and special filing rules that vary by state. Get a free, confidential review from a Delaware medical malpractice attorney. Most work on contingency, so there is no upfront cost.
Sources and References
- 18 Del. C. 6856 (statute of limitations, discovery rule, minors) and 6853 (affidavit of merit)(delcode.delaware.gov).gov
- Delaware Code Title 18, Chapter 68, Health-Care Medical Negligence Insurance and Litigation Act(delcode.delaware.gov).gov
- 10 Del. C. 8132 (comparative negligence) and 8107 (limitation for wrongful death and personal injury)(delcode.delaware.gov).gov
- Delaware Superior Court, the trial court of general jurisdiction for medical negligence actions(courts.delaware.gov).gov