Nevada
Nevada Wrongful Death Laws (2026): Deadlines

When a person in Nevada dies because of another party's wrongful act or neglect, state law lets the family and the estate pursue a wrongful death claim. Nevada's approach is distinctive: a single statute, NRS 41.085, creates two separate claims that recover different kinds of damages. 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 Nevada
Nevada's limitation period for a death caused by another's wrongful act or neglect is two years, set by NRS 11.190(4)(e). The clock runs from the date of death rather than from the date of the underlying accident or injury, which matters when an injured person survives for a time before passing away.
Two years is the same length as Nevada's general personal injury limit, but the death triggers the wrongful death clock, so the date of death is the figure to mark. Claims against a government entity carry their own separate notice requirements and shorter timelines, so families considering a claim against a public defendant should act quickly. Missing the deadline almost always ends the case, so confirming the exact date with a licensed attorney early is important.
Who can file a wrongful death claim in Nevada
Nevada is unusual in letting two parties bring claims from the same death. Under NRS 41.085, both the heirs of the decedent and the personal representative of the decedent may maintain an action for damages. The Nevada courts have explained that the statute creates two separate wrongful death claims, one belonging to the heirs and one belonging to the personal representative, with neither able to pursue the other's separate claim.
The heirs are the people who would inherit under Nevada's intestate succession rules, typically the surviving spouse and children, and reaching outward to parents and other relatives when there are no closer survivors. The personal representative is the executor or administrator of the estate. In practice, the same case often advances both claims at once, but they recover different damages and are evaluated separately.
Wrongful death versus a survival action
Nevada folds the survival concept into the same statute rather than placing it in a separate chapter. The heirs' claim under NRS 41.085 is the classic wrongful death claim: it compensates the surviving family for their own losses, including grief and the loss of the relationship. The personal representative's claim functions like a survival action, capturing what the decedent could have recovered, such as the medical expenses and other special damages caused by the injury, and any penalties the decedent personally could have pursued.

Notably, damages for the decedent's own pain, suffering, or disfigurement are not recoverable by the heirs and do not survive to the estate under the statute's structure. The estate's recovery is focused on the decedent's special damages and on penalties, including punitive damages, rather than on the decedent's pre-death pain.
Damages you can recover
Nevada allows a broad range of recovery, split between the two claims. The heirs may recover damages for their grief or sorrow, the loss of probable support, and the loss of the companionship, society, comfort, and consortium of the deceased. Allowing grief or sorrow damages places Nevada among the states that compensate the emotional loss directly, rather than limiting recovery to purely financial measures.
The personal representative, on behalf of the estate, may recover the decedent's special damages, such as the medical and funeral expenses caused by the injury and death, and any penalties, including exemplary or punitive damages, the decedent would have recovered had the decedent lived. This two-track structure means a Nevada family can pursue both their personal losses and the estate's losses in the same case, each measured under its own rules.
Caps on damages
There is no general cap on compensatory wrongful death damages in Nevada. The recovery is measured by the losses actually proven by the heirs and the estate, without a statutory ceiling on ordinary wrongful death awards. Nevada does cap noneconomic damages in professional negligence cases involving health care providers, which can apply when a death arises from medical care, so a medical case should be evaluated under those separate rules. Claims against government entities also carry their own separate limits and procedures.
Punitive damages
Unlike many states, Nevada expressly allows punitive damages to be recovered in the wrongful death framework. NRS 41.085 lets the personal representative recover, on behalf of the estate, any penalties, including exemplary or punitive damages, that the decedent would have recovered if the decedent had lived. Punitive awards are reserved for conduct involving oppression, fraud, or malice and must be proven to a heightened standard, so they are not part of every case.

How fault affects recovery
Nevada follows modified comparative negligence under NRS 41.141. If the deceased person was partly at fault, the recovery is reduced by that share of fault. Recovery is barred entirely only when the deceased person's negligence was greater than the combined negligence of the defendants against whom recovery is sought. In short, the claim can proceed as long as the deceased was not more at fault than the defendants, with the award reduced in proportion to the deceased person's percentage.
How the proceeds are distributed
Because Nevada splits the claim, the two recoveries are handled differently. The damages awarded on the heirs' claim belong to the heirs for their own losses and are not part of the estate. The damages awarded on the personal representative's claim, including the decedent's special damages and any penalties, become assets of the estate and pass under the will or the intestate succession rules. The court oversees the case, and where minors or multiple beneficiaries are involved, it may review how the recovery is allocated to protect their interests.
How to evaluate your situation
A lawsuit cannot replace the person who was lost, but Nevada law gives both the family and the estate a structured way to seek accountability and compensation, on a firm timeline. Useful first steps include preserving the death certificate, the medical and accident records, and proof of the deceased person's earnings and the family's losses, and identifying who will serve as personal representative, since the estate's claim runs through that person. Because the two-year deadline, the two-claim structure, and any government-claim notice periods can each control the case, speaking with a licensed Nevada 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 Nevada?
Generally two years from the date of death under NRS 11.190(4)(e). The clock runs from the death itself, not from the date of the underlying accident or injury. 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 Nevada?
Under NRS 41.085, both the decedent's heirs and the personal representative of the estate may bring claims. These are two separate claims that recover different damages. The heirs recover their own losses, while the personal representative recovers the estate's losses and any penalties.
What damages can be recovered in a Nevada wrongful death case?
The heirs can recover grief or sorrow, loss of probable support, and loss of companionship, society, comfort, and consortium. The personal representative can recover the decedent's special damages, such as medical and funeral expenses, and any penalties, including exemplary or punitive damages, the decedent could have recovered if they had lived.
Is there a cap on wrongful death damages in Nevada?
There is no general cap on compensatory wrongful death damages in Nevada. Nevada does cap noneconomic damages in medical professional negligence cases, which can apply when a death arises from health care, and claims against government entities carry their own separate limits.
Injured in Nevada? 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 Nevada personal-injury attorney. Most work on contingency, so there is no upfront cost.
Sources and References
- NRS 41.085 (heirs and personal representatives may maintain action for wrongful death; damages)(leg.state.nv.us).gov
- NRS 11.190 (periods of limitation; two years for death caused by wrongful act or neglect)(leg.state.nv.us).gov
- NRS 41.141 (comparative negligence; when not a bar to recovery)(leg.state.nv.us).gov
- NRS Chapter 41 (actions and proceedings in particular cases concerning persons)(leg.state.nv.us).gov