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

When a person in Utah dies because of someone else's negligence or wrongful act, state law lets the deceased person's heirs, or the estate's representative, bring a wrongful death claim. It is a civil case, separate from any criminal prosecution, meant to compensate the family for the loss. Utah is unusual in one important respect: its state constitution protects wrongful death recoveries from being capped. This guide explains how Utah wrongful death claims work in plain language. It is general legal information and attorney advertising, not legal advice, and reading it does not create an attorney-client relationship.
The deadline to file in Utah
The statute of limitations for a Utah wrongful death claim is generally two years from the date of death under Utah Code 78B-2-304. Filing late almost always bars the claim, so this deadline should be confirmed early. Claims against a governmental entity carry their own shorter notice requirements under the Utah Governmental Immunity Act, and some situations can affect the timing, so a licensed Utah attorney should confirm the actual date that applies as soon as possible.
Who can file in Utah
Utah allows the claim to be brought by either of two parties under Utah Code 78B-3-106: the deceased person's heirs, or the personal representative of the estate acting for the benefit of the heirs. This gives families flexibility, because an heir can sue directly without first opening a formal estate, though coordinating a single action is important.

Utah Code 78B-3-105 defines who counts as an heir for this purpose. The primary heirs are the surviving spouse, the deceased person's children, and the deceased person's parents (natural parents, or adoptive parents if the deceased was adopted). Stepchildren can also qualify if they were minors at the time of death and were primarily financially dependent on the deceased. If none of those people survive, the heirs are determined by Utah's law of intestate succession, which reaches other blood relatives. All eligible heirs share in a single wrongful death action.
Wrongful death versus survival actions
Utah keeps two distinct claims, and both can arise from the same death. The wrongful death claim, under Utah Code 78B-3-106, compensates the heirs for their own losses caused by the death. The survival action, under Utah Code 78B-3-107, is different: it continues the legal claim the deceased person held, so that the cause of action does not abate when the injured person (or the wrongdoer) dies.
The survival action is brought by the personal representative or heirs and belongs to the estate. It recovers the losses the deceased personally suffered, most importantly the conscious pain and suffering the deceased endured between the injury and death, along with the deceased person's medical expenses and other economic losses during that period. Keeping the two claims separate matters because they compensate different things and different parties: the wrongful death recovery goes to the heirs for their losses, while the survival recovery becomes an estate asset.
Damages you can recover
Utah wrongful death damages are broad. The economic component includes the loss of the financial support the deceased would have provided and the value of lost services, and for an adult decedent it can include the loss of a reasonably expected inheritance. The noneconomic component is generous compared with many states: heirs may recover for the loss of the deceased person's society, companionship, love, care, protection, and affection, and Utah also allows the survivors to recover for their own grief, sorrow, and mental anguish from the loss.
Through the separate survival action, the estate adds the deceased person's own pre-death conscious pain and suffering and related expenses. Together, the two claims let a Utah family seek compensation for both the relationship they lost and what the deceased personally endured. The award compensates real losses proven by the evidence, not any promised figure.
Damage caps and punitive damages
Utah is distinctive here. The Utah Constitution, in Article XVI, Section 5, provides that the right of action to recover damages for injuries resulting in death shall never be abrogated, and the amount recoverable shall not be subject to any statutory limitation, except where compensation for such death is otherwise provided by law (such as workers' compensation). This is a constitutional protection, which means the Legislature cannot impose a cap on wrongful death damages the way some other states do. There is therefore no general cap on Utah wrongful death damages.

Punitive damages may be available where the evidence shows the defendant acted with willful and malicious conduct, or with a knowing and reckless indifference toward, and disregard of, the rights of others. Punitive damages in Utah are governed by separate statutory standards, including a clear-and-convincing evidence requirement and a formula that allocates part of any large punitive award to the state.
How fault affects the claim
Utah follows modified comparative fault under its Liability Reform Act. If the deceased person was partly responsible for the event that caused the death, the recovery is reduced by that share of fault, and it is barred entirely if the deceased person's fault was 50 percent or more. So a deceased person found 40 percent at fault would reduce a recovery by 40 percent, while a deceased person found 50 percent or more at fault would bar the claim.
How proceeds are distributed
A Utah wrongful death recovery is for the heirs and is divided among them according to their respective losses. When the heirs cannot agree on the division, the court apportions the award among them based on the evidence of each heir's loss, rather than by a fixed share formula. The separate survival recovery belongs to the estate and is distributed through probate under the deceased person's will or Utah intestacy rules, where it can be reached by estate creditors. Because apportionment among heirs can be contested, families often address it early with counsel.
How to move forward
Losing a family member to someone else's wrongful act is devastating, and the filing deadline does not pause for grief. The practical steps are to preserve records, including the death certificate, medical and accident records, and proof of the deceased person's earnings and the family's losses; to identify who qualifies as an heir under Utah's definition; and to consider whether to sue as an heir directly or through an estate representative. Speaking with a licensed Utah attorney promptly matters because of the two-year deadline. 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 information, not legal advice.

Frequently Asked Questions
What is the deadline to file a wrongful death claim in Utah?
Generally two years from the date of death under Utah Code 78B-2-304. Claims against a governmental entity carry shorter notice requirements under the Utah Governmental Immunity Act. Missing the deadline usually bars the case, so confirm the exact date with a Utah attorney quickly.
Who can file a wrongful death lawsuit in Utah?
Under Utah Code 78B-3-106, either the deceased person's heirs or the estate's personal representative may bring the claim. Utah Code 78B-3-105 defines heirs as the surviving spouse, children, and parents, then minor financially dependent stepchildren, and finally other blood relatives by intestate succession if none of those survive.
What damages can be recovered in a Utah wrongful death case?
Loss of financial support and services, loss of a reasonably expected inheritance for an adult decedent, and loss of the deceased person's society, companionship, love, care, protection, and affection. Utah also allows the survivors' own grief and sorrow. A separate survival action under 78B-3-107 adds the deceased person's pre-death pain and suffering and medical bills for the estate.
Is there a cap on wrongful death damages in Utah?
No. The Utah Constitution, Article XVI, Section 5, bars any statutory limit on the amount recoverable for a death, except where compensation is otherwise provided by law such as workers' compensation. This constitutional protection means the Legislature cannot cap Utah wrongful death damages, so recovery is measured by the losses proven.
Injured in Utah? 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 Utah personal-injury attorney. Most work on contingency, so there is no upfront cost.
Sources and References
- Utah Code 78B-3-106, death of a person, suit by heir or personal representative(le.utah.gov).gov
- Utah Code 78B-3-105, definition of heir for wrongful death actions(le.utah.gov).gov
- Utah Code 78B-3-107, survival of action for injury or death (the estate's survival claim)(le.utah.gov).gov
- Utah Constitution Article XVI, Section 5, barring statutory limits on wrongful death recovery(le.utah.gov).gov
- USA.gov, probate and settling a deceased person's estate(usa.gov).gov