Minnesota
Minnesota Wrongful Death Laws (2026): Deadlines

When a person in Minnesota dies because of another party's negligence or wrongful act, the law lets the family seek compensation through a wrongful death claim. Minnesota's approach is distinctive: the claim is brought by a court-appointed trustee for the next of kin, and the recovery is measured by the family's pecuniary loss. The rules come mainly from Minnesota Statutes Section 573.02. This guide explains how they work in plain language. It is general information and attorney advertising, not legal advice, and reading it does not create an attorney-client relationship.
The deadline to file in Minnesota
Minnesota sets the wrongful death deadline directly in the wrongful death statute. Under Section 573.02, the action must be commenced within three years after the date of death, with an important outer boundary: it can never be commenced more than six years after the act or omission that caused the death. The three-year period is the usual deadline, while the six-year limit is a hard ceiling that can matter when a death follows the wrongful conduct by a long interval.
Missing the deadline almost always ends the case. Claims involving a government entity carry their own separate, shorter notice requirements, so families considering a claim against a public defendant should act quickly. Because the interaction of the three-year and six-year limits can be subtle, confirming the exact deadline with a licensed attorney early is important.
Who can file a wrongful death claim in Minnesota
Minnesota is one of the trustee states. Rather than letting family members sue directly or routing the claim through the estate's personal representative, Section 573.02 requires that the action be brought by a trustee appointed by the court. The surviving spouse or one of the next of kin petitions the court in writing to be appointed, or to have someone appointed, as trustee, and that trustee then commences and controls the lawsuit on behalf of everyone entitled to share.

The people the claim is for are the surviving spouse and next of kin. Next of kin is read in the usual order of closeness, beginning with the spouse and children and moving outward to parents, siblings, and other relatives when there are no closer survivors. The trustee is a procedural representative; the actual beneficiaries are the family members who suffered a loss, and the trustee owes them a duty to handle the recovery for their benefit.
Wrongful death versus a survival action
Minnesota addresses both wrongful death and survival within Section 573.02. The wrongful death claim compensates the surviving spouse and next of kin for their own pecuniary losses caused by the death. A survival concept also appears in the statute: where the deceased person had begun, or could have begun, an action for the injury, the claim can be continued or maintained by the trustee, capturing damages the decedent suffered from the injury before death. The statute also covers the situation in which an injured person later dies from an unrelated cause, allowing the trustee to pursue the damages from the original injury. In practice, the same trustee-driven structure carries both the survivors' losses and the decedent's own injury damages, subject to the same three-year and six-year limits.
Damages you can recover
Minnesota measures wrongful death damages by pecuniary loss to the surviving spouse and next of kin. The jury awards the amount it deems fair and just in reference to that loss. While pecuniary loss sounds purely financial, Minnesota courts have long read it broadly. It includes the loss of the financial support and household services the deceased would have provided, and it also includes the loss of the advice, comfort, assistance, guidance, counsel, and companionship that the deceased would have furnished to the family. This means the relational losses families care about are recoverable, framed within the pecuniary-loss measure rather than as a separate grief award.
Minnesota's tradition is described as pecuniary-focused, which historically distinguished it from states that allow stand-alone grief or sorrow damages. The practical effect today is that loss of companionship and similar harms are compensable, but they are presented and proven as components of the family's pecuniary loss. Funeral and burial expenses and approved demands for the support of the decedent are also accounted for and are deducted before distribution.
Caps on damages
There is no general cap on compensatory wrongful death damages in Minnesota. The recovery is measured by the pecuniary loss actually proven to the surviving spouse and next of kin, without a statutory ceiling on ordinary wrongful death awards. As in every state, claims against government entities can carry their own separate limits and procedures, so a claim against a public defendant should be evaluated under those rules.

How fault affects recovery
Minnesota follows modified comparative fault under Section 604.01. If the deceased person was partly at fault, the recovery is reduced by that percentage of fault. Recovery is barred entirely only if the deceased person's fault was greater than the fault of the party against whom recovery is sought. In other words, the claim can proceed as long as the deceased was not more at fault than the defendant, with the award reduced in proportion to the deceased person's share.
How the proceeds are distributed
The trustee brings the claim, but the trustee does not keep the money. Section 573.02 directs that the recovery, after deducting funeral expenses and any court-approved demands for the support of the decedent, is paid to the surviving spouse and next of kin in proportion to the pecuniary loss each of them suffered. The court oversees this division, and a hearing may be held to determine each beneficiary's share. Because the distribution turns on each person's actual loss rather than on fixed intestacy fractions, families with several potential beneficiaries should expect the court to weigh the relationships and dependencies involved.
How to evaluate your situation
A lawsuit cannot replace the person who was lost, but Minnesota law gives the family a structured way to seek accountability and compensation, on a firm timeline. Useful first steps include preserving the death certificate, medical and accident records, and proof of the deceased person's earnings and the family's losses, and identifying who will petition to serve as trustee, since the claim cannot proceed without a trustee appointment. Because the three-year deadline, the six-year ceiling, and government-claim notice periods can each control the case, speaking with a licensed Minnesota attorney promptly is wise. 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 guide is information, not legal advice.

Frequently Asked Questions
What is the deadline to file a wrongful death claim in Minnesota?
Generally three years from the date of death under Minn. Stat. 573.02, but the claim can never be brought more than six years after the wrongful act or omission. Claims against a government entity have separate, shorter notice deadlines, so confirm the exact date with an attorney quickly.
Who can file a wrongful death lawsuit in Minnesota?
A trustee appointed by the court files the claim. The surviving spouse or one of the next of kin petitions the court to appoint a trustee, who then brings the action for the benefit of the surviving spouse and next of kin. Family members do not sue individually.
What damages can be recovered in a Minnesota wrongful death case?
Damages are measured by the pecuniary loss to the surviving spouse and next of kin. Minnesota courts read pecuniary loss broadly to include lost financial support and services as well as the loss of the advice, comfort, assistance, counsel, guidance, and companionship the deceased would have provided. Funeral and burial expenses are also recoverable.
Is there a cap on wrongful death damages in Minnesota?
There is no general cap on compensatory wrongful death damages in Minnesota. The recovery is measured by the pecuniary loss actually proven. Claims against government entities can carry their own separate limits and procedures.
Injured in Minnesota? 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 Minnesota personal-injury attorney. Most work on contingency, so there is no upfront cost.
Sources and References
- Minnesota Statutes 573.02 (action for death by wrongful act; survival of actions)(revisor.mn.gov).gov
- Minnesota Statutes 573.02 full text (PDF, Office of the Revisor of Statutes)(revisor.mn.gov).gov
- Minnesota Statutes 604.01 (comparative fault; effect)(revisor.mn.gov).gov
- Minnesota Statutes Chapter 573 (survival of causes; death by wrongful act)(revisor.mn.gov).gov