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

Mississippi sets a relatively short window to sue for medical malpractice and caps noneconomic (pain and suffering) damages at a fixed amount. A claim generally must be filed within 2 years of when the injury was or should have been discovered, an absolute 7-year outer deadline applies in most cases, and noneconomic damages are limited to $500,000. Patients must also give the provider written notice before filing. The figures and rules below come from the Mississippi Code and Mississippi appellate decisions. This page is general legal information, not legal advice.
Statute of Limitations in Mississippi
Under Miss. Code Ann. 15-1-36, a medical malpractice claim generally must be filed within 2 years from the date the alleged act, omission, or neglect was discovered, or with reasonable diligence should have been discovered. This discovery rule means the clock can start later than the date of treatment if the harm was not reasonably apparent at the time.
The discovery rule does not extend the deadline indefinitely. It runs from when a reasonable person would have known of the injury and its possible cause, not from when an attorney later confirms a claim.
The 2-year period also interacts with the pre-suit notice requirement and the 7-year statute of repose described below, so the practical deadline in any case requires careful calculation.
Statute of Repose
Mississippi imposes an absolute outer deadline, a statute of repose, in Miss. Code Ann. 15-1-36. Most medical malpractice claims cannot be brought more than 7 years after the alleged act, omission, or neglect, even if the injury was not discovered until later.
There are two principal exceptions to the 7-year repose. The first is for a foreign object left in the patient's body during a procedure, which accrues when the object is or should have been discovered. The second is for malpractice that the provider fraudulently concealed.
Damage Caps in Mississippi
Mississippi caps noneconomic damages in medical malpractice cases at $500,000 under Miss. Code Ann. 11-1-60(2)(a). Noneconomic damages include pain, suffering, mental anguish, emotional distress, loss of enjoyment of life, and disfigurement. Economic damages, such as past and future medical bills and lost earnings, are not capped.

The cap applies in the aggregate to all noneconomic damages regardless of the number of plaintiffs or defendants, and it is a flat figure that is not indexed for inflation. This medical-malpractice cap is lower than Mississippi's general civil noneconomic cap of $1,000,000 found in the same statute.
Unlike some states where supreme courts have struck down malpractice caps, Mississippi's $500,000 noneconomic cap remains in force, and Mississippi appellate courts have continued to apply it, including reducing jury noneconomic awards to the statutory limit. A patient cannot assume a noneconomic award above $500,000 will stand.
Pre-Suit Notice
Before filing a medical malpractice lawsuit, Mississippi requires the plaintiff to serve the provider with at least 60 days' written notice of the intent to sue, under Miss. Code Ann. 15-1-36. The notice must explain the legal basis of the claim and the nature of the alleged injuries.
When the notice is served within 60 days before the limitations period would expire, the statute provides a limited extension so the notice period can run. Because the interaction between the notice and the deadline is technical, the timing should be confirmed early.
Certificate and Expert Consultation
Mississippi requires the plaintiff's attorney to consult a qualified medical expert before filing a malpractice action, under Miss. Code Ann. 11-1-58. The statute originally also required attaching a certificate of that consultation to the complaint.
In Wimley v. Reid (2008), the Mississippi Supreme Court held that the requirement to attach a certificate to the complaint was an unconstitutional infringement on the judiciary's authority over procedural court rules, so a complaint cannot be dismissed simply for failing to attach the certificate. The underlying requirement to consult an expert before suing remains. Expert testimony is generally still necessary to prove a malpractice claim at trial.
Standard of Care and Who May Be Liable
A Mississippi malpractice claim turns on whether a health care provider departed from the recognized standard of care and caused the patient's injury. Potentially liable parties can include physicians, nurses, other licensed providers, hospitals, and clinics, depending on the facts.

Mississippi generally requires expert testimony to establish both the applicable standard of care and that a breach caused the injury, which is why pre-suit expert consultation is built into the statute.
Comparative Negligence
Mississippi is a pure comparative negligence state under Miss. Code Ann. 11-7-15. A plaintiff's own negligence does not bar recovery, but the damages are reduced in proportion to the plaintiff's percentage of fault.
In practice, this means a patient can still recover a reduced amount even if found largely at fault, because Mississippi does not apply a percentage threshold that cuts off recovery. The award is simply lowered by the plaintiff's share.
Wrongful Death Medical Malpractice
When malpractice causes death, the claim is brought under Mississippi's wrongful death statute, Miss. Code Ann. 11-7-13, by the statutory beneficiaries or the estate's representative. The $500,000 noneconomic cap under Miss. Code Ann. 11-1-60 applies to the noneconomic portion of a wrongful death malpractice recovery.
The timing for a wrongful death malpractice claim still runs against the malpractice limitations framework, including the 2-year discovery period and 7-year repose, so families should confirm the controlling deadline rather than assuming a single fixed period.
Evaluating and Preserving a Potential Claim
If you suspect malpractice, request complete medical records promptly and write down what happened while it is fresh. Mississippi's 2-year deadline, 7-year repose, mandatory notice, and expert consultation rules mean that delay can foreclose an otherwise valid claim.

Most medical malpractice attorneys offer a free initial consultation and work on a contingency fee, meaning they are paid a percentage only if the case recovers money. No attorney can guarantee an outcome or a dollar amount, and every case depends on its specific facts and medical evidence.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the deadline to sue for medical malpractice in Mississippi?
Generally 2 years from when the act, omission, or neglect was, or with reasonable diligence should have been, discovered (Miss. Code Ann. 15-1-36). A separate 7-year statute of repose bars most claims filed more than 7 years after the act, with exceptions for foreign objects and fraudulent concealment. Confirm your specific deadline with a licensed Mississippi attorney.
Does Mississippi cap medical malpractice damages?
Yes, on noneconomic damages only. Miss. Code Ann. 11-1-60(2)(a) caps noneconomic (pain and suffering) damages in medical malpractice cases at $500,000. The cap is a flat figure not adjusted for inflation, and economic damages such as medical bills and lost wages are not capped.
Do I need an expert affidavit or certificate in Mississippi?
Mississippi requires the plaintiff's attorney to consult a qualified medical expert before filing under Miss. Code Ann. 11-1-58. The separate requirement to attach a certificate of that consultation to the complaint was held unenforceable in Wimley v. Reid (2008), but expert support is still needed to prove a malpractice claim.
Is there a pre-suit notice requirement in Mississippi?
Yes. Under Miss. Code Ann. 15-1-36 you must give the provider at least 60 days' written notice of your intent to sue before filing. If the notice is served within 60 days of the deadline, a limited extension applies so the notice period can run.
How much is a Mississippi medical malpractice case worth?
There is no set value. Recovery depends on the specific injuries, economic losses, and evidence, with noneconomic damages capped at $500,000 under Miss. Code Ann. 11-1-60 and economic damages uncapped. No attorney can promise a particular outcome or amount.
Is Mississippi's $500,000 malpractice cap still in effect?
Yes. The $500,000 noneconomic cap under Miss. Code Ann. 11-1-60(2)(a) remains in force in 2026, and Mississippi appellate courts have continued to apply it, including reducing jury noneconomic awards to that limit. It has not been struck down.
What if I was partly at fault for my own injury?
Mississippi follows pure comparative negligence under Miss. Code Ann. 11-7-15. Your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault, but your own fault does not bar recovery even at high percentages.
How long do families have to file a wrongful death malpractice claim in Mississippi?
A wrongful death malpractice claim is brought under Miss. Code Ann. 11-7-13 and still runs against the malpractice deadlines, including the 2-year discovery period and 7-year repose in Miss. Code Ann. 15-1-36. The $500,000 noneconomic cap applies to the noneconomic portion of the recovery.
Harmed by medical care in Mississippi? 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 Mississippi medical malpractice attorney. Most work on contingency, so there is no upfront cost.
Sources and References
- Mississippi Court of Appeals opinion applying Miss. Code Ann. 11-1-60(2)(a) and reducing a noneconomic medical malpractice award to the $500,000 statutory cap(courts.ms.gov).gov
- Wimley v. Reid, 991 So. 2d 135 (Miss. 2008), Mississippi Supreme Court - certificate-attachment requirement under Miss. Code Ann. 11-1-58 held unenforceable; pre-suit expert consultation requirement retained(courtlistener.com).gov
- Mississippi Legislature (official Mississippi Code portal; Title 15 Ch. 1 Sec. 15-1-36 limitations and 7-year repose, Title 11 noneconomic cap and comparative negligence)(legislature.ms.gov).gov
- Mississippi Court of Appeals opinion applying Miss. Code Ann. 11-7-15 pure comparative negligence (damages diminished in proportion to plaintiff's fault, no bar to recovery)(courts.ms.gov).gov