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

When a death in Wyoming is caused by another person's wrongful act, neglect, or default, Wyo. Stat. 1-38-101 creates a claim that the family would have had if the injured person had lived. The claim must be filed within two years of the death, and Wyoming is notable because its state constitution bars any law that would cap the damages a family can recover for a death. This guide explains how Wyoming's wrongful death statutes work in plain terms.
Losing a family member to someone else's conduct is painful, and the legal process can feel like one more weight during grief. The information below is general legal information and attorney advertising, not legal advice. This guide is part of our Wrongful Death Laws by State series.
The deadline to file (statute of limitations)
Wyoming applies a two-year statute of limitations to wrongful death claims. Under Wyo. Stat. 1-38-102(d), an action for wrongful death must be commenced within two years after the death of the decedent. The clock generally runs from the date of death rather than the date of the underlying injury. This is the key deadline, and missing it almost always ends the claim permanently. Wyoming has a distinctive procedural step: before suit, a court must appoint a wrongful death representative, and the statute provides that the two-year period is tolled while a properly filed appointment action is pending, until thirty days after the appointment order is entered. Claims involving government defendants carry separate notice requirements under the Wyoming Governmental Claims Act, so families often confirm the applicable deadlines early.
Who may file a wrongful death claim in Wyoming
Wyoming uses a structure that is unusual among the states. Under Wyo. Stat. 1-38-102(a), every wrongful death action must be brought by and in the name of the decedent's wrongful death representative for the exclusive benefit of the beneficiaries who have sustained damage. That representative is appointed by the district court in a separate action filed solely for the appointment, under Wyo. Stat. 1-38-103. The court selects the person who will best represent the interests of the potential beneficiaries as a whole, weighing the applicant's relationship to the deceased person and the interests of the other beneficiaries. Any person who claims to qualify may intervene in the appointment action, and the representative must publish notice and file a report identifying the known beneficiaries. Because no suit can proceed until that representative is in place, families typically begin the appointment process promptly.
Wrongful death vs. survival action in Wyoming
Most states separate two claims after a death: a wrongful death claim for the survivors' losses and a survival action for the deceased person's own pre-death losses. Wyoming handles this differently. Under Wyo. Stat. 1-4-101, when a person who has a personal injury claim dies, recovery is limited to damages for wrongful death. In effect, Wyoming does not provide a separate survival action that lets the estate recover the deceased person's own pre-death pain and suffering as an independent claim. Instead, the wrongful death action under 1-38-102 is the vehicle through which the beneficiaries recover, and the statute lets each beneficiary prove and recover their respective damages.

Damages recoverable in a Wyoming wrongful death case
Under Wyo. Stat. 1-38-102(c), the court or jury may award such damages, pecuniary and exemplary, as are deemed fair and just. Each person for whose benefit the action is brought may prove their own damages, and the court or jury may award that person the amount it considers them entitled to. The statute specifically lists damages for loss of probable future companionship, society, and comfort. Wyoming courts have read the statute to allow a range of losses, which typically include:
- Lost financial support and the contributions the deceased person would have provided.
- The value of lost services, care, and guidance.
- Loss of the deceased person's companionship, society, and comfort.
- The survivors' grief and mental anguish caused by the death.
- Reasonable funeral and burial expenses.
Because the statute expressly authorizes exemplary damages and broad relational losses, Wyoming allows survivors to recover both the economic and the emotional dimensions of the loss.
Damage caps in Wyoming wrongful death cases
Wyoming stands out for a constitutional protection against damage caps. Article 10, Section 4 of the Wyoming Constitution provides that no law shall be enacted limiting the amount of damages to be recovered for causing the injury or death of any person. That provision bars the legislature from capping wrongful death damages, including in areas such as medical malpractice where many other states impose limits. As a result, there is no statutory dollar ceiling on economic or noneconomic wrongful death damages in Wyoming. The constitution does allow the legislature to require alternative dispute resolution or a medical review panel before a health-care lawsuit is filed, but that is a procedural step and not a cap on the amount recoverable.
Punitive damages
Punitive damages, which Wyoming's wrongful death statute calls exemplary damages, can be available in a Wyoming wrongful death case. Wyo. Stat. 1-38-102(c) expressly authorizes the court or jury to award exemplary as well as pecuniary damages where they are deemed fair and just, which generally requires conduct that was willful, wanton, or in reckless disregard of others rather than ordinary negligence. Because the Wyoming Constitution bars damage caps in death cases, exemplary awards in wrongful death actions are not subject to a fixed statutory dollar limit, though they remain subject to ordinary judicial and constitutional review.

Comparative or contributory fault
Wyoming follows modified comparative fault under Wyo. Stat. 1-1-109. If the deceased person shared some fault for the incident, the recovery is reduced in proportion to that share rather than barred, as long as the deceased person's fault was not more than fifty percent of the total fault of all actors. If the deceased person's fault exceeds fifty percent, recovery is barred. Wyoming also applies several liability, meaning each defendant is responsible only for its own proportionate share of the fault rather than for the entire award.
How proceeds are distributed
A Wyoming wrongful death recovery is for the beneficiaries, not for the estate's creditors. Under Wyo. Stat. 1-38-102(b), if the deceased person left a spouse, child, father, or mother, no debt of the decedent may be paid out of a wrongful death judgment or settlement. Because each beneficiary may prove their own damages, the court or jury can allocate the award to reflect each person's individual loss. The court that appointed the wrongful death representative may also approve a settlement and resolve disputes over how the proceeds are divided, which gives the court direct oversight of the distribution.
How to evaluate a wrongful death claim in Wyoming
The two-year deadline in Wyoming is firm, and the required appointment of a wrongful death representative adds a step that takes time, so confirming the deadline and beginning the appointment early matters. Keeping records such as the death certificate, accident or incident reports, medical bills, and proof of the deceased person's earnings and contributions can help when a lawyer reviews the situation. Most wrongful death attorneys offer a free initial consultation and work on a contingency fee, meaning a fee only if there is a recovery. No general guide can predict how a specific case will turn out, and nothing here is a promise of compensation or a statement that any particular person has a claim. A licensed Wyoming attorney can explain how the wrongful death statutes, the constitutional bar on caps, and the comparative fault rule apply to a particular set of facts.

Frequently Asked Questions
What is the deadline to file a wrongful death claim in Wyoming?
Two years from the date of death under Wyo. Stat. 1-38-102(d). The clock generally runs from the death. Because a court must first appoint a wrongful death representative, the two-year period is tolled while a properly filed appointment action is pending, until thirty days after the appointment order. Government-defendant claims carry separate notice deadlines, so confirm the exact dates with an attorney quickly.
Who can file a wrongful death lawsuit in Wyoming?
A wrongful death representative appointed by the district court brings the action, in their own name, for the exclusive benefit of the beneficiaries who have sustained damage. The court appoints the person who will best represent the interests of all potential beneficiaries, and anyone claiming to qualify may intervene in the appointment action under Wyo. Stat. 1-38-103.
What damages can be recovered in a Wyoming wrongful death case?
Under Wyo. Stat. 1-38-102(c), the court or jury may award pecuniary and exemplary damages, including loss of probable future companionship, society, and comfort. In practice that covers lost financial support, the value of lost services and guidance, the survivors' grief and mental anguish, and reasonable funeral expenses. Each beneficiary may prove and recover their own damages.
Is there a cap on wrongful death damages in Wyoming?
No. Article 10, Section 4 of the Wyoming Constitution bars the legislature from enacting any law that limits the amount of damages for the injury or death of a person. As a result there is no statutory cap on economic or noneconomic wrongful death damages in Wyoming, including in medical-malpractice cases.
Injured in Wyoming? 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 Wyoming personal-injury attorney. Most work on contingency, so there is no upfront cost.
Sources and References
- Wyoming Statutes Title 1, sections 1-38-101 through 1-38-105 (wrongful death) and 1-1-109 (comparative fault), official Legislative Service Office text(wyoleg.gov).gov
- Wyoming Constitution Article 10, Section 4, no law limiting the amount of damages for injury or death (official text)(wyoleg.gov).gov
- Wyoming Legislature, official State Statutes and Constitution download portal (Legislative Service Office)(wyoleg.gov).gov
- USA.gov, probate and settling a deceased person's estate(usa.gov).gov