Idaho
Wrongful Death Laws in Idaho (2026): Deadlines & Who Can Sue

Losing someone you love because of another person's carelessness is a wound that no lawsuit can heal. Idaho law does, however, give the people closest to the person who died a way to hold the responsible party accountable and to recover for the losses the death caused. This guide explains how an Idaho wrongful death claim works: the deadline to file, who has the right to sue, what damages are available, and how Idaho's damages rules apply. It is general information and attorney advertising, not legal advice.
The deadline to file in Idaho
The deadline to file an Idaho wrongful death claim is generally two years. Idaho Code 5-311 creates the claim, and the two-year limitation period under Idaho Code 5-219 applies, measured from the date of death. Because the death itself starts the clock in the typical case, families should confirm the exact deadline early rather than assuming they have extra time.
The deadline can be much shorter when the at-fault party is a government entity. Idaho's Tort Claims Act requires a formal notice of claim to be filed with the government within a limited window (often as short as 180 days) before any lawsuit, so claims involving a city, county, state agency, or government employee need prompt attention. An attorney can confirm which deadline applies to your situation.
Who can file a wrongful death claim in Idaho
Idaho Code 5-311 lets the decedent's heirs, or the personal representative of the estate on their behalf, bring the wrongful death action. The statute defines "heirs" by reference to Idaho's rules of intestate succession and expressly includes the surviving spouse, children, stepchildren, parents, and certain dependent blood relatives, as well as a putative spouse who depended on the decedent.
Because Idaho allows either the heirs or the personal representative to sue, families sometimes coordinate a single action to avoid duplicate claims. Sorting out who should file, and in what capacity, is one of the first things an attorney addresses.
Wrongful death versus a survival action
Idaho recognizes two distinct claims that can arise from the same death, and they compensate different losses.

A wrongful death claim under Idaho Code 5-311 belongs to the survivors and compensates them for what the death has cost them, such as lost support and the loss of the decedent's companionship.
A survival action under Idaho Code 5-327 is different. It continues the claim the person who died could have brought had they lived, including their own pre-death medical expenses and conscious pain and suffering, and any recovery belongs to the estate. Pursuing both together can affect the total recovery, so families should understand which losses fall under each.
Damages you can recover
Idaho Code 5-311 directs that damages be "as under all the circumstances of the case as may be just," and Idaho courts have explained what that includes. Economic damages cover the financial support and services the decedent would have provided, along with funeral and burial expenses. Noneconomic damages cover the loss of the decedent's protection, comfort, society, and companionship.
Idaho law draws an important line here. Idaho courts have held that wrongful death heirs may recover for the loss of the decedent's society and companionship but may not recover for their own grief and anguish. The decedent's own pre-death pain and suffering is recovered through the survival action rather than the wrongful death claim.
Caps on damages in Idaho
Idaho does not cap economic damages such as lost support, but it does cap noneconomic damages. Idaho Code 6-1603 limits noneconomic damages to a figure that started at $250,000 and is adjusted each July 1 based on changes in the state's average annual wage, so the current ceiling is higher than the original amount.
The cap has significant exceptions. By its own terms, it does not apply to causes of action arising out of willful or reckless misconduct, or to conduct that the trier of fact finds beyond a reasonable doubt would constitute a felony. Whether the cap applies in a given case often turns on the nature of the conduct that caused the death.
Punitive damages
Punitive damages, meant to punish especially serious misconduct, are available in an Idaho wrongful death action but are tightly controlled. Idaho Code 5-327 bars punitive damages in the survival action where the injured person has died, so the request is made through the wrongful death claim.

Idaho Code 6-1604 governs how punitive damages work. A plaintiff cannot simply plead them; the court must first grant a pretrial motion to add the claim after finding a reasonable likelihood of proving, by clear and convincing evidence, oppressive, fraudulent, malicious, or outrageous conduct. The statute also caps punitive damages at the greater of $250,000 or three times the compensatory award.
Common situations that lead to a claim
Idaho wrongful death claims arise from many kinds of preventable death. The most common include motor vehicle crashes, including collisions on rural highways and with commercial trucks; medical negligence such as misdiagnosis, surgical errors, or medication mistakes; defective or dangerous products; unsafe property, including falls and recreational-area hazards; and workplace accidents, which may also involve a workers compensation claim. A civil wrongful death claim can proceed regardless of whether a related criminal case is brought, because the civil case uses a lower burden of proof. The type of incident shapes who the responsible parties are and what evidence the claim turns on, but the core questions stay the same: who may sue, by when, and for what losses.
How fault affects the claim
Idaho applies modified comparative negligence under Idaho Code 6-801. If the person who died shared some of the fault, the recovery is reduced by their percentage of responsibility. If that share is as great as the fault of the party being sued (broadly, 50% or more), the claim is barred entirely. In practice this means the at-fault party often disputes how much the decedent contributed to the incident, because even a modest shift in the fault percentages changes the recovery, and a finding at the 50% line can defeat the claim outright. Because fault can be contested in this way, how it is apportioned often shapes the outcome of a wrongful death case.
How proceeds are distributed
Because Idaho ties wrongful death standing to the decedent's heirs, recovery is generally shared among those statutory heirs according to their respective losses, rather than paid to a single person. A survival recovery, by contrast, belongs to the estate and is distributed under the decedent's will or Idaho's intestacy rules. Coordinating the two recoveries and the probate of the estate is part of resolving a wrongful death case.

How to move forward
If you have lost a family member to someone else's wrongful act, the most useful early steps are practical ones. Preserve the death certificate, medical and accident records, and proof of the decedent's earnings and the family's losses, and confirm who has the right to file. Because Idaho's deadline is generally two years (and far shorter for government claims), speaking with a licensed Idaho attorney promptly protects your options. Most wrongful death attorneys offer a free consultation and work on a contingency basis, meaning no upfront fee and payment only out of any recovery. No outcome can be promised, and this article is general information, not legal advice, and does not create an attorney-client relationship.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the deadline to file a wrongful death claim in Idaho?
Generally two years from the date of death, under Idaho Code 5-311 together with the two-year limitation period in Idaho Code 5-219. Claims against a government entity require a much earlier notice of claim, often within about 180 days, so it is important to confirm the deadline that applies to your case as soon as possible.
Who can file a wrongful death lawsuit in Idaho?
Idaho Code 5-311 allows the decedent's heirs, or the personal representative of the estate acting on their behalf, to file. 'Heirs' is defined by Idaho's succession rules and includes the surviving spouse, children, parents, and certain dependents. An attorney can confirm who should file and in what capacity.
What damages can be recovered in an Idaho wrongful death case?
Recoverable damages can include lost financial support and services, funeral and burial costs, and the loss of the decedent's protection, comfort, society, and companionship. Idaho does not allow recovery for the survivors' grief and anguish, and the decedent's own pre-death pain is recovered through a separate survival action.
Is there a cap on wrongful death damages in Idaho?
There is no cap on economic damages such as lost support, but Idaho Code 6-1603 caps noneconomic damages at an inflation-adjusted figure above $250,000. The cap does not apply to willful or reckless misconduct or to conduct that would constitute a felony. Punitive damages are separately limited by Idaho Code 6-1604.
Injured in Idaho? Get a free case review from a personal-injury attorney
If someone else's negligence caused your injury, you may be owed compensation for medical bills, lost wages, and pain and suffering. Get a free, no-obligation review from a Idaho personal-injury attorney. Most work on contingency, so there is no upfront cost.
Sources and References
- Idaho Code 5-311, suit for wrongful death by or against heirs or personal representatives(legislature.idaho.gov).gov
- Idaho Code 5-327, survival of causes of action(legislature.idaho.gov).gov
- Idaho Code 6-1603, limitation on noneconomic damages(legislature.idaho.gov).gov
- Idaho Code 6-1604, limitation on punitive damages(legislature.idaho.gov).gov
- Idaho Code 6-801, comparative responsibility(legislature.idaho.gov).gov