Maryland
Maryland Wrongful Death Laws (2026): Deadlines & Who Sues

When a person in Maryland dies because of another party's wrongful act, neglect, or default, the law allows certain family members to bring a wrongful death claim for their losses, and the estate to bring a separate survival action for the harm the decedent suffered. Maryland's wrongful death statute is found in the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article, and it sets the deadline, who may sue, and the damages available. This guide explains the current rules, including Maryland's noneconomic damages cap and its strict fault rule. It is general information and attorney advertising, not legal advice.
The deadline to file in Maryland
Under the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article, a Maryland wrongful death action generally must be filed within three years after the date of death. This is the central deadline, and the trigger is the date of death rather than the date of the underlying injury. Missing it almost always ends the case.
A few situations carry different periods. Wrongful death claims based on an occupational disease have a longer limitations period, and Maryland allows a longer window for claims arising from certain criminal homicides where the defendant has been convicted. Separately, claims against a state or local government entity require a formal notice of claim within a short window, often before the broader limitations period would otherwise run, and missing that notice can defeat an otherwise timely case. Because these variations can change the math, and because the survival action and wrongful death claim can have different practical timing, confirming your specific deadlines early is essential.
Who can file in Maryland
Maryland law sorts the people who may benefit from a wrongful death action into two tiers. The action is first for the benefit of the primary beneficiaries: the wife, husband, parent, and child of the deceased person. These close family members have the right to recover.

If there are no primary beneficiaries, the action may be brought for the benefit of any secondary beneficiary, meaning a person related to the deceased by blood or marriage who was substantially dependent on the deceased. The beneficiaries themselves are the real parties in interest, and only one wrongful death action may be filed for a given death, so all beneficiaries are typically joined in a single case.
Wrongful death versus survival action
Maryland recognizes two distinct claims arising from the same death, and they often proceed together. The wrongful death claim under section 3-904 compensates the surviving family members for their own losses, such as lost support and loss of companionship. The survival action is different: brought by the personal representative under the Estates and Trusts Article (section 7-401), it continues the claim the decedent could have pursued had they lived, including the conscious pain and suffering the decedent experienced before death and the medical expenses incurred. Any recovery in the survival action belongs to the estate and is distributed through it, while the wrongful death recovery goes to the beneficiaries.
Damages you can recover
Maryland allows a broad range of wrongful death damages. Economic damages include the financial support the deceased would have provided, the value of lost household services, and funeral and burial expenses. The statute makes clear that recovery is not limited to the strict pecuniary loss rule.
Noneconomic damages are expressly allowed and can be substantial. They include mental anguish, emotional pain and suffering, and the loss of society, companionship, comfort, protection, care, attention, advice, counsel, training, guidance, and education the family loses. The survival action adds the decedent's own pre-death pain and suffering and medical expenses on behalf of the estate.
Damage caps and punitive damages
Maryland caps noneconomic damages, and the cap applies to wrongful death. The base limit rises by $15,000 each year. For causes of action arising in the year ending October 1, 2026, the base cap on noneconomic damages is $965,000. In a wrongful death action with two or more beneficiaries, the cap rises to 150 percent of the base figure, which is about $1,447,500 for that year. Economic damages such as lost support and funeral costs are not subject to this cap. Medical malpractice wrongful death claims are governed by a separate cap.

Punitive damages are very difficult to obtain in Maryland. They require proof of actual malice, meaning conduct motivated by ill will or intent, by clear and convincing evidence, which means ordinary negligence cases do not qualify. As a result, the vast majority of wrongful death recoveries in Maryland are compensatory.
How fault affects the claim
Maryland is one of the few states that still follows pure contributory negligence. If the person who died is found to have contributed even slightly to the events that caused the death, the survivors can be barred from recovering anything. Narrow exceptions exist, including the last clear chance doctrine and special protection for young children, who cannot be held to an adult standard of care. Because this rule is unforgiving, how fault is proved and allocated is often central to a Maryland wrongful death case.
How proceeds are distributed
In a wrongful death action, the damages are awarded for the benefit of the qualifying beneficiaries, and where there is more than one beneficiary the verdict typically states an amount for each so the court can apportion the recovery according to each person's relationship to and loss from the deceased. Because the multi-beneficiary cap (150 percent of the base figure) is a single ceiling shared across all beneficiaries rather than a separate cap for each, the way a jury divides a capped award among several family members can matter a great deal.
Survival action proceeds are different: they belong to the estate and pass through probate, either to the heirs under Maryland's intestacy rules or under the decedent's will, and they can be reached by valid claims of the decedent's creditors before any distribution to family. Because the two claims distribute money on different paths, how a settlement or verdict is allocated between the wrongful death claim and the survival claim can affect what each family member ultimately receives.
How to evaluate your situation
After losing a family member to someone else's wrongful act, a few steps help protect the family's rights. Preserve key records, including the death certificate and any medical, accident, or police records, along with proof of the deceased person's earnings and the support they provided. Identify who the primary beneficiaries are and confirm the three-year deadline early, since occupational disease and homicide cases follow different rules. 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 attorney can promise a specific outcome. This article is general information, not legal advice, and reading it does not create an attorney-client relationship.

Frequently Asked Questions
What is the deadline to file a wrongful death claim in Maryland?
A Maryland wrongful death action generally must be filed within 3 years from the date of death. Longer periods apply to certain occupational disease claims and to claims arising from some criminal homicides, and claims against a government entity can carry separate notice rules. Because missing the deadline usually ends the case, confirm yours with an attorney promptly.
Who can file a wrongful death lawsuit in Maryland?
The claim is first for the benefit of the primary beneficiaries: the deceased's spouse, parent, and child. If there are no primary beneficiaries, it may be brought for secondary beneficiaries related to the deceased by blood or marriage who were substantially dependent on the deceased. Only one wrongful death action is filed per death, so all beneficiaries are joined together.
What damages can be recovered in a Maryland wrongful death case?
Economic damages include lost financial support, lost household services, and funeral expenses. Noneconomic damages include mental anguish, emotional pain and suffering, and loss of society, companionship, comfort, care, guidance, and counsel. A separate survival action lets the estate recover the decedent's own pre-death pain and suffering and medical expenses.
Is there a cap on wrongful death damages in Maryland?
Yes. Maryland's noneconomic damages cap applies to wrongful death. For causes of action arising in the year ending October 1, 2026, the base cap is $965,000, and in a wrongful death case with two or more beneficiaries it rises to 150 percent of that figure (about $1,447,500). Economic damages are not capped, and medical malpractice claims follow a separate cap.
Injured in Maryland? 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 Maryland personal-injury attorney. Most work on contingency, so there is no upfront cost.
Sources and References
- Maryland Courts & Judicial Proceedings section 3-904, wrongful death damages and beneficiaries(mgaleg.maryland.gov).gov
- Maryland Courts & Judicial Proceedings section 11-108, limitation on noneconomic damages(mgaleg.maryland.gov).gov
- Maryland Estates & Trusts section 7-401, powers of personal representative (survival of actions)(mgaleg.maryland.gov).gov
- Cornell Legal Information Institute, wrongful death action overview(law.cornell.edu)