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Ohio Civil Rights Violation Case Calculator

In Ohio, a civil rights case usually means one of a few things: a Section 1983 claim against a government actor for violating your constitutional rights (excessive force, unlawful arrest, retaliation), a federal employment-discrimination claim, or a housing or public-accommodation discrimination claim. Which framework applies determines the deadlines, the defenses (like qualified immunity), and the damages available.

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In Ohio, you generally have 2 years to file a civil rights violation claim. What your case is worth depends on your specific damages and Ohio's laws — use the calculator below for a free estimate of your low-to-high range.

Key Ohio Laws

Filing Deadline2 years
in line with the national average of 2.8 years
EEOC Charge Deadline180–300 days
Required before most federal discrimination suits

How Ohio Law Affects Your Civil Rights Violation Case

Because Section 1983 has no statute of limitations of its own, Ohio courts borrow the state's personal-injury deadline — about 2 years here, in line with the national average of 2.8 years. Claims against government entities can also carry much shorter notice-of-claim deadlines (often 60–180 days), and federal employment claims require an EEOC charge within 180–300 days — any of which can bar your case if missed.

Two doctrines shape Ohio civil rights cases against the government. Qualified immunity can shield individual officials unless the right they violated was "clearly established" at the time. And under Monell, a city or county is liable only if an official policy, custom, or failure to train caused the violation — not simply because it employed the wrongdoer. Overcoming these is often the central battle in a Section 1983 case.

Compensation in a Ohio civil rights case covers economic and non-economic harm and, in egregious cases, punitive damages. Federal fee-shifting (Section 1988) means a prevailing plaintiff's attorney fees are paid by the defendant, so civil rights attorneys frequently take meritorious cases on contingency.

How Does Ohio Compare?

2 yrs
Filing Deadline
Avg: 2.8 yrs
Modified
Fault System
Modified Comparative Fault (51% Bar)

Ohio Civil Rights Violation FAQs

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Legal Disclaimer

This calculator uses Ohio'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 Ohio-licensed attorney before making decisions about your case. Learn about our methodology.

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