Georgia Wrongful Death Settlement Calculator
In Georgia wrongful death cases, you can recover damages only if your fault is less than 50%. If the jury finds you equally at fault (50/50), you recover nothing. This threshold makes the fault determination in wrongful death cases especially consequential — the difference between 49% and 50% fault is the difference between receiving compensation and receiving nothing.
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How Georgia Law Affects Your Wrongful Death Case
You have 2 years to file suit in Georgia, a deadline that is in line with the national average of 2.3 years. This is a standard timeframe, but acting sooner preserves evidence and strengthens your position. In wrongful death cases, the limitations period typically runs from the date of death rather than the date of the underlying incident, a distinction that matters when the decedent died from complications weeks or months after the injury.
Georgia's wrongful death statute generally allows specific family members — typically the surviving spouse, children, and sometimes parents — to recover damages on behalf of the decedent's estate or themselves. The exact hierarchy of eligible beneficiaries and whether damages flow through the estate or directly to survivors varies by state. Establishing standing as a proper claimant under Georgia law is a threshold requirement before damages analysis begins.
Wrongful death damages in Georgia typically include economic losses (lost wages and benefits the decedent would have earned, lost services, medical expenses from the final illness or injury, funeral and burial costs) and non-economic losses (loss of companionship, guidance, consortium, and emotional support). Some Georgia cases also support punitive damages when the defendant's conduct was particularly egregious. Carefully documenting each category is essential to maximize recovery.
Key Georgia Laws
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Legal Disclaimer
This calculator uses Georgia'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 Georgia-licensed attorney before making decisions about your case. Learn about our methodology.
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