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A statute of repose sets an absolute deadline for filing certain legal claims, regardless of when the injury was discovered. Unlike a statute of limitations, which usually starts when you find out you were harmed, a statute of repose starts from a fixed event — such as the date a product was made, a building was completed, or medical care was provided. Once that deadline passes, the claim is barred, even if the injury wasn’t known until later.
While both limit the time to sue, they work differently. A statute of limitations is based on when you knew or should have known about your injury. A statute of repose is based on a fixed point in time and doesn’t care when you learned of the harm. In many states, statutes of repose can create harsh results for victims who discover their injury late.
Legislatures created them to provide finality and prevent lawsuits over very old events. They protect defendants — such as builders, manufacturers, and medical providers — from having to defend claims decades after the work was done. However, they can also unfairly bar victims who had no way of knowing they were harmed.
In most cases, no — they are strict. Some states have limited exceptions, such as for fraud, concealment, or if the victim was a minor. But even then, the extensions are often narrow. If you think a statute of repose may apply, you should contact an attorney immediately.
A statute of repose can quietly but completely block a claim before a victim even knows they’ve been injured. Knowing the difference between it and a statute of limitations — and acting quickly — is key to protecting your rights.
A statute of repose is a strict legal deadline for filing certain lawsuits, starting from a fixed event like construction completion or product manufacture. Once it passes, you cannot sue — even if you just discovered the injury.
No. Each state decides whether to have a statute of repose and for which cases it applies.
Sometimes. Lawyers may challenge it on constitutional grounds or argue an exception applies, but success is rare.
It varies widely — often 4 to 10 years, depending on the state and type of claim.
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