Delaware Premises Liability Settlement Calculator
Delaware's 51% bar for comparative fault means you can still recover in a premises liability case as long as you are not more than 50% at fault. In a two-premises liability collision where fault is split 50/50, you can still recover 50% of your damages. This is slightly more favorable than 50% bar states, where equal fault eliminates recovery entirely.
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How Delaware Law Affects Your Premises Liability Case
Delaware gives you 2 years from the date of the incident to file a lawsuit, which is in line with the national average of 2.7 years. This is a standard timeframe, but acting sooner preserves evidence and strengthens your position.
Premises liability claims in Delaware turn on the visitor's relationship to the property. Paying customers and other business invitees are owed the strongest duty: owners must actively inspect the premises and remedy or warn of dangers. Social guests (licensees) are owed a duty only as to known hazards. This framework means the location of your injury — a store, an office, a private home — substantially affects the legal analysis.
To win a Delaware slip-and-fall or hazard-based premises case, you generally must prove the property owner had actual or constructive notice of the dangerous condition. Constructive notice means the hazard existed long enough that a reasonable owner exercising reasonable care would have discovered it. Evidence of the condition's duration — timestamps on security footage, maintenance logs, witness accounts — is frequently decisive in Delaware premises cases.
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Legal Disclaimer
This calculator uses Delaware's statutes as of 2026-03-06. Laws change frequently. This tool provides estimates for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Verify current rules with a Delaware-licensed attorney before making decisions about your case. Learn about our methodology.
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