South Carolina
Medical Malpractice Laws in South Carolina (2026): Caps

South Carolina sets specific deadlines for medical malpractice claims, caps noneconomic (pain and suffering) damages with a figure that is adjusted for inflation each year, and requires patients to clear several pre-suit steps before filing. A claim generally must be brought within 3 years, an absolute 6-year outer deadline applies, and the noneconomic cap starts at a base figure set by statute and rises annually with the Consumer Price Index. The rules and figures below come from the South Carolina Code of Laws and the state's Revenue and Fiscal Affairs Office. This page is general legal information, not legal advice.
Statute of Limitations in South Carolina
Under S.C. Code 15-3-545(A), a medical malpractice action must be commenced within three years from the date of the treatment, omission, or operation giving rise to the claim, or within three years from the date the injury was discovered or reasonably should have been discovered. This combination means the clock can start at treatment or later, when a patient first learns of the harm.
The discovery rule is bounded by an absolute outer limit described in the next section. The practical deadline in any case also depends on the pre-suit Notice of Intent, which tolls the limitations period once it is filed.
For foreign-object cases, S.C. Code 15-3-545(B) allows two years from discovery, but never less than three years after the object or apparatus was left in the body. Minors have limited tolling under subsection (D), generally not more than seven years on account of minority.
Statute of Repose
South Carolina pairs the three-year limitation with a six-year statute of repose. Under S.C. Code 15-3-545(A), in no event may a medical malpractice action be brought more than six years from the date of the occurrence. A repose period is an absolute deadline that can expire before a patient even discovers the injury.

The principal exception is the foreign-object rule, which is measured from discovery rather than from the date of the procedure. Because the interaction between discovery, the six-year repose, and the pre-suit notice is technical, the controlling date should be calculated carefully.
Damage Caps in South Carolina
South Carolina caps noneconomic damages in medical malpractice cases but does not cap economic damages such as medical bills and lost earnings. Under S.C. Code 15-32-220, the base limit is $350,000 for each claimant against a single health care provider or institution, and $1,050,000 in the aggregate against all providers and institutions combined.
These base figures do not stay fixed. The statute directs the Revenue and Fiscal Affairs Office to adjust the limit each year for inflation using the Consumer Price Index, with the revised figure published in the State Register. For 2025 the published amounts were approximately $580,461 against a single defendant and $1,741,383 in the aggregate, and the current-year figure is higher or lower depending on the annual CPI calculation.
The cap is not absolute. S.C. Code 15-32-220 removes the limit if the jury or court finds the defendant was grossly negligent, willful, wanton, or reckless and that conduct proximately caused the noneconomic damages, if the defendant engaged in fraud or misrepresentation related to the claim, or if the defendant altered or destroyed medical records to avoid liability. No particular award is guaranteed, because a jury still decides the amount on the facts, subject to the cap.
Notice of Intent and Affidavit of Merit
South Carolina requires several steps before a malpractice lawsuit can be filed. Under S.C. Code 15-79-125, a plaintiff must first file a Notice of Intent to File Suit naming the defendants and stating the facts, and that notice must be accompanied by an affidavit of an expert witness meeting the requirements of S.C. Code 15-36-100. Filing the Notice of Intent tolls the applicable statutes of limitations.
After the Notice is served, the parties must participate in mandatory mediation, generally within ninety to one hundred twenty days. If mediation does not resolve the dispute, the plaintiff may then file the lawsuit within the period the statute allows. Expert testimony is generally required to establish the standard of care and how it was breached.
Who Can Be Liable and Comparative Negligence
Doctors, hospitals, nurses, and other licensed health care providers can be liable for failing to meet the professional standard of care. Hospitals may also be responsible for the conduct of their employees and, in some situations, for their own institutional negligence. A separate emergency-care provision, S.C. Code 15-32-230, limits liability for genuine emergency care unless the provider was grossly negligent.

South Carolina follows modified comparative negligence. A plaintiff who is partly at fault may still recover, but only if found 50% or less responsible, and the damages are reduced in proportion to the plaintiff's share of fault. A plaintiff who is more than 50% at fault recovers nothing.
Wrongful-Death Medical Malpractice
When malpractice causes death, South Carolina law allows a wrongful-death claim brought by the personal representative for the benefit of the statutory beneficiaries. These claims run against the medical malpractice deadlines and the pre-suit Notice of Intent framework, and the noneconomic cap in S.C. Code 15-32-220 applies to the noneconomic portion of the recovery.
Because the timing rules for a death claim can differ from those for an injury claim, families should confirm the controlling deadline rather than assuming a single fixed period.
How to Evaluate and Preserve a Potential Claim
If you think you may have a claim, request your complete medical records, note the key dates, and consult a licensed South Carolina attorney promptly, because the deadlines are strict and the Notice of Intent and affidavit take time to prepare. Many malpractice attorneys offer a free initial consultation and handle cases on a contingency-fee basis, meaning fees are typically paid only out of a recovery.

No attorney can guarantee an outcome or a specific dollar amount, and only a licensed professional reviewing your records can assess your individual situation.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the deadline to sue for medical malpractice in South Carolina?
The general deadline is 3 years from the treatment, omission, or operation, or 3 years from discovery, under S.C. Code 15-3-545(A). A separate 6-year statute of repose bars most claims filed more than 6 years after the occurrence. Filing a Notice of Intent tolls the period. Because exceptions are fact-specific, confirm your exact deadline with a licensed South Carolina attorney.
Does South Carolina cap medical malpractice damages?
Yes, on noneconomic damages only. The base limits in S.C. Code 15-32-220 are $350,000 against a single provider or institution and $1,050,000 in the aggregate, and both are adjusted for inflation each year by the Revenue and Fiscal Affairs Office. Economic damages such as medical bills and lost wages are not capped, and the cap does not apply in cases of gross negligence, fraud, or altered records.
What is the current South Carolina noneconomic damages cap amount?
The cap rises each year with the Consumer Price Index, so the exact figure changes annually. For 2025 the published amounts were about $580,461 against a single defendant and $1,741,383 in the aggregate. The current-year figure is published in the State Register by the Revenue and Fiscal Affairs Office, which should be checked for the controlling number.
Do I need an expert affidavit to file a malpractice case in South Carolina?
Yes. Under S.C. Code 15-79-125 you must first file a Notice of Intent to File Suit accompanied by an expert witness affidavit meeting the requirements of S.C. Code 15-36-100, and then participate in mandatory mediation before filing the lawsuit. Expert testimony is generally needed to prove the claim.
Is there a statute of repose for medical malpractice in South Carolina?
Yes. S.C. Code 15-3-545(A) sets a 6-year statute of repose, an absolute outer deadline measured from the occurrence, regardless of when the injury was discovered. The main exception is the foreign-object rule, which runs from discovery.
How does comparative fault affect a South Carolina malpractice case?
South Carolina uses modified comparative negligence. You can recover only if you are found 50% or less at fault, and your damages are reduced by your percentage of fault. At more than 50% fault, you recover nothing.
What is the deadline for a wrongful-death malpractice claim in South Carolina?
A wrongful-death medical malpractice claim runs against the malpractice deadlines and the pre-suit Notice of Intent framework, and the noneconomic cap in S.C. Code 15-32-220 applies to the noneconomic portion. Because death-claim timing can differ from injury-claim timing, confirm the controlling deadline with a licensed attorney.
How much is a South Carolina medical malpractice case worth?
There is no formula, and no one can promise a result. Value depends on the specific facts, the evidence, the economic losses, and the jury's view of noneconomic harm, which is capped by the inflation-adjusted limit in S.C. Code 15-32-220 unless an exception applies. Every case is different and outcomes are never guaranteed.
Harmed by medical care in South Carolina? 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 South Carolina medical malpractice attorney. Most work on contingency, so there is no upfront cost.
Sources and References
- S.C. Code Title 15, Chapter 32 (Noneconomic Damage Awards), including 15-32-220 (noneconomic damages limit, CPI adjustment, exceptions) and 15-32-230 (emergency care), South Carolina Legislature Online(scstatehouse.gov).gov
- S.C. Code 15-3-545 (Actions for medical malpractice): 3-year limitation, 6-year statute of repose, foreign-object rule, and minority tolling, South Carolina Legislature Online(scstatehouse.gov).gov
- S.C. Code Title 15, Chapter 79, including 15-79-125 (Notice of Intent to File Suit, expert witness affidavit, mandatory mediation), South Carolina Legislature Online(scstatehouse.gov).gov
- South Carolina Revenue and Fiscal Affairs Office, Inflation Adjustments for Legal Proceedings (annual CPI-adjusted noneconomic medical malpractice damages limit under 15-32-220, published in the State Register)(rfa.sc.gov).gov
- S.C. Code 15-36-100 (affidavit of expert witness requirements applicable to professional negligence claims), South Carolina Legislature Online(scstatehouse.gov).gov