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Statute of Limitations for Assault: How Long Do You Have to File?



The statute of limitations for assault sets the legal deadline within which a civil lawsuit or criminal prosecution must be initiated.

Miss that deadline and the claim is typically barred forever, regardless of how strong the evidence is or how serious the harm. This page explains how civil and criminal deadlines differ, when the clock can be paused or delayed, and what options may still be available even when a deadline appears to have passed.

Civil assault and battery claims may be governed by a state's personal injury statute or by a separate limitations period for intentional torts, and those two periods are not always the same. Sexual assault, domestic violence, and childhood abuse cases operate under separate and often far more complex frameworks. Understanding which clock applies, when it started running, and whether it has been paused is the first question in any assault and battery lawsuit. Survivors facing time-sensitive decisions in civil lawsuits for sexual assault or assault litigation should consult an attorney before assuming a deadline has passed.

Contents


1. Civil Vs. Criminal Assault Deadlines


The statute of limitations for assault operates differently depending on whether the proceeding is criminal or civil. The two run independently. A criminal case may be time-barred while a civil claim remains viable, and vice versa. Criminal charges are filed by a state or federal prosecutor, not by the victim. A civil lawsuit is brought by the victim directly and seeks monetary compensation for harm suffered.



Why Civil Lawsuits and Criminal Charges Follow Different Clocks


A criminal statute of limitations governs how long prosecutors have to file charges against a defendant. Once it expires, the state cannot pursue prosecution for that offense regardless of the evidence. A civil statute of limitations governs how long a victim has to file a lawsuit for damages, including medical costs, lost income, pain and suffering, and in appropriate cases, punitive damages. The burden of proof also differs: criminal cases require proof beyond a reasonable doubt, while civil claims require proof by a preponderance of the evidence.

Civil assault and battery differs from negligence in an important way. Assault is the intentional act of placing another person in reasonable apprehension of harmful contact; battery is the actual completion of that harmful contact. Because they are intentional torts rather than negligence claims, some states apply a shorter limitations period than their standard personal injury statute. The two proceedings are also independent in outcome: a defendant acquitted in a criminal case can still be found liable in a civil assault and battery action, because the standards of proof differ.

Legal DimensionCriminal ProsecutionCivil Litigation
Who filesState or federal prosecutorVictim (plaintiff)
Burden of proofBeyond a reasonable doubtPreponderance of the evidence
Outcome soughtConviction, incarcerationMonetary damages, injunctive relief
Deadline governsWhen charges must be filedWhen lawsuit must be filed
Discovery ruleVaries by state and offenseBroadly available in most states
Tolling for minorsCommonCommon; often extends further


State-by-State Civil Assault Deadlines and Caveats


Civil assault and battery claims may be governed by a state's general personal injury statute or by a separate intentional tort period, and those two periods are not always the same. New York, for example, applies a one-year period specifically to assault and battery under CPLR § 215, which is shorter than its three-year general personal injury deadline. Identifying the correct statute requires knowing both the claim type and the applicable state code.

The table below reflects general patterns. Because statutes change and individual circumstances affect which deadline applies, this is a general reference rather than legal advice for any specific case.

Deadline RangeExamplesNotes
1 yearNew York (intentional torts), Kentucky, TennesseeIntentional tort period; shorter than general PI in some states
2 yearsCalifornia, TexasMost common for personal injury claims
3 yearsFlorida, Illinois, New JerseyCommon for intentional torts in these states
4–6 yearsMaine, North Dakota (some claims)Less common; varies by claim type

Louisiana extended its general delictual prescription from one to two years for acts occurring on or after July 1, 2024 under Act 423. When the defendant is a government entity, a separate and typically shorter notice-of-claim requirement may apply before any lawsuit can be filed, regardless of the standard limitations period.



2. Can the Assault Statute of Limitations Be Extended?


The deadline does not always begin running on the date of the assault. Several legal doctrines can pause the clock or delay when it starts, and understanding them is often the difference between a viable claim and a time-barred one.



Tolling for Minors, Incapacity, Threats, and Concealment


Tolling temporarily stops the statute of limitations from running. Courts recognize several circumstances that toll the assault limitations period:

  • Minor Victim: The clock typically pauses while the victim is under 18 and resumes when the survivor reaches the age of majority, often giving adult survivors additional years beyond what the face of the statute suggests.
  • Mental Incapacity: The deadline may be paused while a plaintiff is legally incapacitated and resumes only when capacity is restored.
  • Defendant's Absence from the State: Time a defendant spends outside the state after committing the assault typically does not count toward the limitations period, preventing a perpetrator from running out the clock by relocating.
  • Fraudulent Concealment: If the defendant actively concealed the assault or its effects, equitable tolling may prevent them from benefiting from the passage of time.
  • Threat or Intimidation: Courts may apply equitable tolling where a victim was prevented from filing by threats from the perpetrator or institutional pressure to stay silent.

These doctrines apply differently depending on the state and the type of claim. Civil assault and battery claims are subject to the same tolling rules as other personal injury claims in most jurisdictions, while childhood abuse and sexual assault claims often carry additional and more expansive tolling protections.



Discovery Rule and Delayed Psychological Harm


The discovery rule delays the start of the limitations period until the plaintiff knew, or reasonably should have known, of the injury and its connection to the defendant's conduct. It is particularly significant in cases involving childhood sexual abuse, where survivors may not connect present-day psychological harm to past abuse until years later, often during therapy; assaults with latent physical injuries that manifest well after the incident; and institutional abuse where the identity of the responsible party was concealed.

Many states now recognize a specific discovery rule for childhood sexual abuse, allowing claims to be filed within a defined period after the survivor discovers that a psychological injury was caused by the abuse. Importantly, the burden of establishing that delayed discovery was reasonable rests on the plaintiff. A survivor invoking the discovery rule must demonstrate why the injury or its connection to the assault could not reasonably have been recognized earlier, a fact-intensive showing that typically requires documentation of the trauma history, therapeutic records, or expert support. Emotional distress damages claims arising from assault frequently implicate the discovery rule because psychological harm may not fully manifest until well after the physical incident.


If you are unsure whether a deadline has passed, do not assume the claim is time-barred without consulting an attorney. Tolling provisions, discovery rules, and lookback windows have changed significantly in recent years, and a claim that appears expired under an older framework may still be viable under current law.



3. Sexual Assault and Childhood Abuse Deadline Exceptions


Sexual assault and childhood abuse claims operate under substantially different frameworks than general assault claims. Many states have dramatically extended or eliminated statutes of limitations for these cases, and the law continues to change



Extended Criminal Deadlines for Serious Sexual Offenses


The criminal statute of limitations for sexual assault varies widely by state and offense level. Many states have eliminated or substantially extended criminal limitation periods for serious sexual offenses, especially those involving minors.

Several factors commonly extend or eliminate the criminal deadline:

  • DNA Evidence: Many states eliminate or toll the criminal statute when DNA evidence identifies a previously unknown perpetrator, allowing cold cases to be prosecuted without time limitation.
  • Minor Victim: Most states either toll the criminal deadline until the victim reaches adulthood or extend it significantly beyond the age of majority.
  • Felony Classification: States that retain criminal statutes of limitations typically apply longer periods for felony-level offenses than for misdemeanor sexual assault.

Texas has eliminated the criminal statute of limitations for most categories of sexual assault. Several states, including Wyoming, North Carolina, West Virginia, and Maryland, have no statute of limitations for felony sex crimes. State-by-state rules in this area require current verification, as legislation continues to change.



Civil Revival Windows and Lookback Laws


Under recently enacted revival statutes, several states have opened one-time lookback windows allowing survivors to file civil claims that would otherwise be time-barred. These windows open and close on fixed legislative dates, and missing them forfeits the opportunity entirely.

Active and Recent Lookback Windows

  • California (AB 250): A two-year civil revival window for certain adult sexual assault claims opened January 1, 2026 and runs through December 31, 2027, with important limitations including public-entity exclusions. The permanent civil deadline for childhood sexual abuse is until age 40 or five years from discovery of psychological injury, whichever is later (CCP § 340.1).
  • Mississippi: A temporary lookback window suspending the civil statute of limitations for childhood sexual abuse civil actions runs from July 1, 2024 through June 30, 2027.
  • Louisiana: A revival provision for childhood sexual abuse claims, upheld as constitutional by the Louisiana Supreme Court, has been extended through June 2027.
  • New Jersey: Survivors of childhood sexual abuse may file civil lawsuits before their 55th birthday or within seven years of discovering damages, whichever is later, under a permanent extended deadline rather than a temporary window.

These windows are time-limited by design. A window that is open today may close before a survivor has gathered sufficient evidence or located counsel. Any survivor who believes a lookback window may apply to their situation should seek legal advice promptly.

Civil lawsuits for sexual assault involving institutional defendants such as schools, churches, or youth organizations may involve separate notice requirements, and negligent security and premises liability claims against institutions may run on different timelines from claims against the individual perpetrator.



4. What If the Deadline May Have Passed?


Missing a statute of limitations deadline has serious consequences. Courts apply it strictly, and a case filed even one day late is typically dismissed as a matter of law regardless of the merits. At the same time, assuming a deadline has passed without legal analysis can cause a survivor to abandon a viable claim.



Dismissal Risk, Settlement Risk, and Government Notice Deadline


When a defendant raises the statute of limitations as a defense, the court will dismiss the case if the deadline has expired and no exception applies. The plaintiff loses the right to pursue compensation, and the strength of the underlying claim is irrelevant to that outcome. There is no automatic extension: unlike other procedural rules, a missed deadline cannot typically be excused by late discovery of evidence or the difficulty of the subject matter.

When the defendant is a government entity, the exposure is compounded. Government defendants are typically subject to a notice-of-claim requirement with a deadline shorter than the standard civil statute, sometimes as little as 90 days from the incident. Failing to file the required notice on time can bar a lawsuit even before the standard limitations period runs.

Insurance carriers and institutional defendants track filing deadlines precisely, and some will deliberately extend settlement negotiations until the limitations period quietly passes. Once it expires, a claim that could have been litigated becomes one they can move to dismiss at no cost. Survivors in active settlement discussions should confirm with counsel that negotiations do not substitute for timely filing, because a settlement offer does not pause the statute of limitations clock. Assault case proceedings require early identification of the applicable deadline precisely because the consequences of missing it are absolute.



How an Attorney Evaluates Whether a Claim Is Still Viable


Determining whether a claim is time-barred requires analyzing several questions that are often more complex than they appear on the face of the statute. When did the assault occur? Was the victim a minor? Has the victim recently connected harm to the assault through therapy or medical diagnosis? Is the defendant a government entity subject to a shorter notice requirement? Was the perpetrator absent from the state? Was the harm concealed?

Each of those questions affects the calculation, and the answers are rarely obvious without a review of the specific facts and current state law. Given how rapidly this area has changed, a survivor should not conclude that a deadline has passed without consulting an attorney. Civil action for damages arising from assault can include compensatory damages for medical treatment, therapy, lost income, and pain and suffering, as well as punitive damages where the conduct was egregious. Identifying whether a claim remains viable is always worth a legal consultation before concluding that the window has closed.


If you or someone you know has experienced assault and is uncertain whether a deadline applies, consulting an attorney promptly is the only reliable way to determine what options remain. Laws in this area have changed significantly since 2015 and continue to change.



5. Common Questions about Assault Filing Deadlines


Assault claims raise some of the most time-sensitive legal questions a survivor will face. The answers below address what people most commonly ask after an assault, whether the incident was recent or years ago.



What Is the Statute of Limitations for Assault?


The statute of limitations for assault is the legal deadline for filing a civil lawsuit or criminal charges. For civil claims, most states apply either their general personal injury period or a separate intentional tort period, commonly one to three years from the date of the incident. Sexual assault and childhood abuse cases operate under separate and often longer frameworks. Criminal statutes of limitations vary by state and offense level, and many states have eliminated them for the most serious sexual offenses.



Does the Statute of Limitations Start When the Assault Happened?


Usually, but not always. The general rule is that the clock begins on the date of the incident. The discovery rule delays the start until the victim knew or reasonably should have known of the injury and its connection to the assault. For childhood sexual abuse, this can mean the clock starts years or decades later when the survivor first connects present-day psychological harm to past abuse, often through therapy. The burden of proving that delayed discovery was reasonable rests on the plaintiff, which is a fact-intensive showing that benefits from early legal guidance.



Can the Statute of Limitations Be Paused or Extended?


Yes. Tolling provisions pause the clock for specific circumstances, including minority, mental incapacity, the defendant's absence from the state, and fraudulent concealment of the assault. Many states also apply equitable tolling when a victim was prevented from filing by threats or intimidation. Tolling rules vary by state and by the type of claim, and identifying which provisions apply requires analysis of the specific facts and jurisdiction.



Is There a Statute of Limitations for Sexual Assault?


It depends on the state and whether the proceeding is criminal or civil. Many states have eliminated criminal statutes of limitations for the most serious sexual offenses. Civil deadlines have been dramatically extended in most states, with many allowing claims decades after the assault. Several states have enacted temporary lookback windows that revive previously expired civil claims. This area of law has changed rapidly since 2015 and continues to change.



What If the Assault Happened When I Was a Child?


Childhood assault claims, particularly for sexual abuse, receive the most extended protections. Most states toll the civil deadline until the victim reaches 18, and many then provide additional years or apply the discovery rule specifically to childhood abuse. States such as California, New Jersey, and Vermont have eliminated or significantly extended deadlines for childhood sexual abuse civil claims. Whether a specific claim is still viable requires analysis of the state's current law and when the victim discovered the connection between the abuse and present harm.



What Happens If I Miss the Statute of Limitations?


A case filed after the statute of limitations has expired will typically be dismissed by the court regardless of the strength of the evidence or the seriousness of the harm. The defendant raises the expired deadline as a complete defense, and courts apply it strictly. The only paths forward are statutory revival windows, successful tolling arguments, or demonstrating that the discovery rule delayed the start of the clock. Assuming a deadline has passed without legal analysis risks abandoning a claim that may still be viable.


23 Jun, 2026


La información proporcionada en este artículo es únicamente con fines informativos generales y no constituye asesoramiento legal. Los resultados anteriores no garantizan un resultado similar. La lectura o el uso del contenido de este artículo no crea una relación abogado-cliente con nuestro despacho. Para asesoramiento sobre su situación específica, consulte a un abogado calificado autorizado en su jurisdicción.
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