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



Sex crime deadlines vary by state, victim age, offense, and revival laws. The statute of limitations for sex crimes sets the window within which criminal charges must be filed or a civil lawsuit must be brought, and for sexual offenses, those deadlines have undergone the most dramatic legislative transformation of any area of American law over the past decade.

Many states have eliminated criminal time limits entirely for serious sexual offenses, and more than 30 states have enacted civil lookback windows allowing previously time-barred claims to be revived. Whether a claim is still viable depends on the state, the date of the offense, the victim's age, and whether any revival window applies.

Sex crime matters often involve overlapping criminal defense issues, civil lawsuits for sexual assault, sexual assault litigation, and sex crimes defense considerations simultaneously. Understanding which deadline applies, and whether it has been extended or revived, is the first question in any sex crime legal matter.

Contents


1. Criminal Statute of Limitations for Sex Crimes


The criminal statute of limitations defines how long prosecutors have to file charges. For sexual offenses, the United States has seen sweeping reform of these limits at both the state and federal level, with the trend moving strongly toward elimination or indefinite extension for serious offenses.



Federal Sex Crime Deadlines under §§ 3282, 3283, and 3299


For federal sexual offenses, the applicable limitations period must be analyzed by statute rather than assumed from the general default. Under 18 U.S.C. § 3299, notwithstanding any other law, an indictment may be found or an information instituted at any time without limitation for any felony under Chapter 109A, Chapter 110 (except for sections 2257 and 2257A), Chapter 117, or section 1591. This means many federal felony sex offenses, including aggravated sexual abuse, sexual abuse, sexual abuse of a minor or ward, sexual exploitation of children, child pornography offenses, sex trafficking, and interstate sex offenses, may be prosecuted at any time without a limitations period. The five-year default under 18 U.S.C. § 3282 applies only where no more specific federal limitations provision governs, and its residual role in sex crime cases is narrower than it may appear.

Two additional federal provisions are relevant. Under 18 U.S.C. § 3283, charges involving kidnapping, sexual abuse, or physical abuse of a child under age 18 may be filed within the longer of ten years or the life of the child victim. Under 18 U.S.C. § 3297, the applicable limitations period is suspended for the time needed to identify an individual when DNA evidence implicates their involvement in a felony offense.

Federal StatuteType of OffenseLimitation PeriodKey Caveat
18 U.S.C. § 3282General non-capital offenses5 yearsApplies only where no specific provision governs
18 U.S.C. § 3283Child kidnapping, sexual abuse, physical abuse10 years or life of child, whichever is longerApplies broadly across child abuse statutes
18 U.S.C. § 3299Ch. 109A felonies, Ch. 110 felonies (except §§ 2257–2257A), Ch. 117, § 1591No limitEnacted by Adam Walsh Act 2006; circuit courts continue to develop application
18 U.S.C. § 3297DNA-implicated felony offensesTolled during DNA identification periodApplies alongside other periods
18 U.S.C. § 1591Sex trafficking by force/fraud or of a childNo limit (covered by § 3299)Both adult and child trafficking included


State Criminal Deadlines for Adult and Child Sexual Offenses


State criminal limitations periods for sexual offenses vary by the severity of the offense and the age of the victim. According to CHILD USA's 2024 Statute of Limitations Reform Tracker, 44 states, 6 U.S. .erritories, and the federal government have no criminal statute of limitations for child sexual abuse. For adult sexual assault, the landscape is more varied, with some states retaining limitations periods of 5 to 21 years and others eliminating them for the most serious felony offenses. Federalist Society

Jurisdiction TypeTypical Criminal PeriodNotes
Federal (§ 3299 covered offenses)No limitCh. 109A, 110 felonies, Ch. 117, § 1591
Federal (§ 3283)10 years or life of childChild kidnapping and abuse
Federal (§ 3282 default)5 yearsOnly where no specific provision applies
States with no criminal SOL for CSA44 states + territories + federalCHILD USA 2024 tracker
State felony sexual assault (adult)5–21 years (varies)Some states have eliminated entirely
State misdemeanor sexual offense1–5 years (varies)Shorter periods, few eliminations
DNA exception statesNo limit when DNA availableApplies regardless of general SOL in many states

Sex crimes defense counsel must verify the current limitations period for the specific charge and jurisdiction, because state legislatures have amended these statutes frequently.



2. Civil Statute of Limitations for Sex Crimes


The civil statute of limitations for sexual offenses has undergone even more dramatic reform than the criminal side. Civil claims allow survivors to seek monetary compensation from perpetrators and, in many cases, from institutions that enabled the abuse.



Childhood Sexual Abuse Claims and Extended Civil Deadlines


As of September 2025, 30 states and 3 U.S. .erritories have revived expired civil statutes of limitations or enacted windows for expired civil claims. 19 states and 2 U.S. .erritories have no civil statute of limitations for child sexual abuse at all. The following examples illustrate the range of approaches, though the law in each state changes frequently and must be verified: JustiaFederalist Society

StateCivil Period for CsaNotes
CaliforniaUntil age 40 or 5 years from discovery (CCP § 340.1)No SOL for abuse on/after Jan. 1, 2024; AB 250 adult revival window open 2026–2027
New YorkUntil age 55 for childhood abuseAdult revival window (ASA) closed Nov. 2023
New JerseyUntil age 55 or 7 years from discoveryLookback window closed Nov. 2021; discovery rule permanent
MississippiLookback window July 1, 2024–June 30, 2027Active revival window for childhood sexual abuse
NevadaNo limit (permanently retroactively eliminated)Enacted 2021
VermontNo limit (permanently retroactively eliminated)Enacted 2019
DelawareNo limit against perpetratorsGross negligence standard for third-party institutional claims
MinnesotaNo limit; discovery rule; vicarious liability claims by age 24Third-party institutional claims have separate rules
Texas30 years from minor victim's 18th birthdayNon-retroactive; controlling period is law in effect at time of events


Adult Sexual Assault Claims and Institutional Liability


Adult sexual assault civil claims generally carry longer periods than standard personal injury claims, but the variation across states is significant. Many survivors pursue civil claims not only against the individual perpetrator but also against institutions that employed, supervised, or enabled the abuser, including schools, churches, youth organizations, and hospitals. Negligent security and premises liability theories allow survivors to hold institutions accountable when they failed to prevent foreseeable harm or concealed known abusers.

Institutional claims frequently carry different limitations rules than claims against individual perpetrators. Some states apply shorter periods or stricter fault standards to third-party institutional claims even where claims against perpetrators are unlimited. Delaware requires a showing of gross negligence for institutional claims. Minnesota requires vicarious liability claims against employers to be filed by the victim's 24th birthday. Civil lawsuits for sexual assault involving government entity defendants may also require a separate notice-of-claim filing with deadlines as short as 90 days from the incident, independent of the general civil limitations period.


If you are a survivor evaluating whether a civil or criminal claim is still viable, or if you have been charged with a sexual offense, the limitations analysis requires current state-specific verification. Laws in this area change frequently, and a claim that appears time-barred under older law may still be actionable under a recently enacted lookback window or discovery rule. Consulting an attorney promptly is the only reliable way to know what options remain.



3. Olling, Discovery Rules, and When the Clock Starts


Because sexual abuse frequently causes trauma that delays recognition, reporting, and legal action, legislatures and courts have developed extensive tolling and accrual doctrines that can significantly extend the time available to survivors.



Minor Tolling, Delayed Discovery, and Repressed Memory


§ 3299 정확한 조항 확인 완료. 전문 재작성합니다.


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

Sex crime deadlines vary by state, victim age, offense, and revival laws. The statute of limitations for sex crimes sets the window within which criminal charges must be filed or a civil lawsuit must be brought, and for sexual offenses, those deadlines have undergone the most dramatic legislative transformation of any area of American law over the past decade.

Many states have eliminated criminal time limits entirely for serious sexual offenses, and more than 30 states have enacted civil lookback windows allowing previously time-barred claims to be revived. Whether a claim is still viable depends on the state, the date of the offense, the victim's age, and whether any revival window applies.

Sex crime matters often involve overlapping criminal defense issues, civil lawsuits for sexual assault, sexual assault litigation, and sex crimes defense considerations simultaneously. Understanding which deadline applies, and whether it has been extended or revived, is the first question in any sex crime legal matter.


1. Criminal Statute of Limitations for Sex Crimes

The criminal statute of limitations defines how long prosecutors have to file charges. For sexual offenses, the United States has seen sweeping reform of these limits at both the state and federal level, with the trend moving strongly toward elimination or indefinite extension for serious offenses.

Federal Sex Crime Deadlines Under §§ 3282, 3283, and 3299

For federal sexual offenses, the applicable limitations period must be analyzed by statute rather than assumed from the general default. Under 18 U.S.C. § 3299, notwithstanding any other law, an indictment may be found or an information instituted at any time without limitation for any felony under Chapter 109A, Chapter 110 (except for sections 2257 and 2257A), Chapter 117, or section 1591. This means many federal felony sex offenses, including aggravated sexual abuse, sexual abuse, sexual abuse of a minor or ward, sexual exploitation of children, child pornography offenses, sex trafficking, and interstate sex offenses, may be prosecuted at any time without a limitations period. The five-year default under 18 U.S.C. § 3282 applies only where no more specific federal limitations provision governs, and its residual role in sex crime cases is narrower than it may appear. Congress.gov

Two additional federal provisions are relevant. Under 18 U.S.C. § 3283, charges involving kidnapping, sexual abuse, or physical abuse of a child under age 18 may be filed within the longer of ten years or the life of the child victim. Under 18 U.S.C. § 3297, the applicable limitations period is suspended for the time needed to identify an individual when DNA evidence implicates their involvement in a felony offense.

Federal StatuteType of OffenseLimitation PeriodKey Caveat
18 U.S.C. § 3282General non-capital offenses5 yearsApplies only where no specific provision governs
18 U.S.C. § 3283Child kidnapping, sexual abuse, physical abuse10 years or life of child, whichever is longerApplies broadly across child abuse statutes
18 U.S.C. § 3299Ch. 109A felonies, Ch. 110 felonies (except §§ 2257–2257A), Ch. 117, § 1591No limitEnacted by Adam Walsh Act 2006; circuit courts continue to develop application
18 U.S.C. § 3297DNA-implicated felony offensesTolled during DNA identification periodApplies alongside other periods
18 U.S.C. § 1591Sex trafficking by force/fraud or of a childNo limit (covered by § 3299)Both adult and child trafficking included

State Criminal Deadlines for Adult and Child Sexual Offenses

State criminal limitations periods for sexual offenses vary by the severity of the offense and the age of the victim. According to CHILD USA's 2024 Statute of Limitations Reform Tracker, 44 states, 6 U.S. .erritories, and the federal government have no criminal statute of limitations for child sexual abuse. For adult sexual assault, the landscape is more varied, with some states retaining limitations periods of 5 to 21 years and others eliminating them for the most serious felony offenses. Federalist Society

Jurisdiction TypeTypical Criminal PeriodNotes
Federal (§ 3299 covered offenses)No limitCh. 109A, 110 felonies, Ch. 117, § 1591
Federal (§ 3283)10 years or life of childChild kidnapping and abuse
Federal (§ 3282 default)5 yearsOnly where no specific provision applies
States with no criminal SOL for CSA44 states + territories + federalCHILD USA 2024 tracker
State felony sexual assault (adult)5–21 years (varies)Some states have eliminated entirely
State misdemeanor sexual offense1–5 years (varies)Shorter periods, few eliminations
DNA exception statesNo limit when DNA availableApplies regardless of general SOL in many states

Sex crimes defense counsel must verify the current limitations period for the specific charge and jurisdiction, because state legislatures have amended these statutes frequently.


2. Civil Statute of Limitations for Sex Crimes

The civil statute of limitations for sexual offenses has undergone even more dramatic reform than the criminal side. Civil claims allow survivors to seek monetary compensation from perpetrators and, in many cases, from institutions that enabled the abuse.

Childhood Sexual Abuse Claims and Extended Civil Deadlines

As of September 2025, 30 states and 3 U.S. .erritories have revived expired civil statutes of limitations or enacted windows for expired civil claims. 19 states and 2 U.S. .erritories have no civil statute of limitations for child sexual abuse at all. The following examples illustrate the range of approaches, though the law in each state changes frequently and must be verified: JustiaFederalist Society

StateCivil Period for CsaNotes
CaliforniaUntil age 40 or 5 years from discovery (CCP § 340.1)No SOL for abuse on/after Jan. 1, 2024; AB 250 adult revival window open 2026–2027
New YorkUntil age 55 for childhood abuseAdult revival window (ASA) closed Nov. 2023
New JerseyUntil age 55 or 7 years from discoveryLookback window closed Nov. 2021; discovery rule permanent
MississippiLookback window July 1, 2024–June 30, 2027Active revival window for childhood sexual abuse
NevadaNo limit (permanently retroactively eliminated)Enacted 2021
VermontNo limit (permanently retroactively eliminated)Enacted 2019
DelawareNo limit against perpetratorsGross negligence standard for third-party institutional claims
MinnesotaNo limit; discovery rule; vicarious liability claims by age 24Third-party institutional claims have separate rules
Texas30 years from minor victim's 18th birthdayNon-retroactive; controlling period is law in effect at time of events

Adult Sexual Assault Claims and Institutional Liability

Adult sexual assault civil claims generally carry longer periods than standard personal injury claims, but the variation across states is significant. Many survivors pursue civil claims not only against the individual perpetrator but also against institutions that employed, supervised, or enabled the abuser, including schools, churches, youth organizations, and hospitals. Negligent security and premises liability theories allow survivors to hold institutions accountable when they failed to prevent foreseeable harm or concealed known abusers.

Institutional claims frequently carry different limitations rules than claims against individual perpetrators. Some states apply shorter periods or stricter fault standards to third-party institutional claims even where claims against perpetrators are unlimited. Delaware requires a showing of gross negligence for institutional claims. Minnesota requires vicarious liability claims against employers to be filed by the victim's 24th birthday. Civil lawsuits for sexual assault involving government entity defendants may also require a separate notice-of-claim filing with deadlines as short as 90 days from the incident, independent of the general civil limitations period.


If you are a survivor evaluating whether a civil or criminal claim is still viable, or if you have been charged with a sexual offense, the limitations analysis requires current state-specific verification. Laws in this area change frequently, and a claim that appears time-barred under older law may still be actionable under a recently enacted lookback window or discovery rule. Consulting an attorney promptly is the only reliable way to know what options remain.


3. Tolling, Discovery Rules, and When the Clock Starts

Because sexual abuse frequently causes trauma that delays recognition, reporting, and legal action, legislatures and courts have developed extensive tolling and accrual doctrines that can significantly extend the time available to survivors.

Minor Tolling, Delayed Discovery, and Repressed Memory

Tolling temporarily suspends the running of the limitations period. In sex crime cases, the most significant tolling doctrines include:

  • Minor victim tolling: In virtually all states, the civil limitations period is tolled while the victim is under 18. The clock typically begins when the victim reaches the age of majority, and many states then provide additional years or apply the discovery rule from that point.
  • Discovery rule: The limitations period does not begin until the plaintiff knew, or through reasonable diligence should have known, that they suffered an injury caused by the defendant's conduct. For survivors of childhood sexual abuse, this frequently means the clock does not begin until the survivor connects present-day psychological harm to the abuse, often through therapy. The burden of establishing that delayed discovery was reasonable rests on the plaintiff, requiring documentation of the trauma history and the circumstances that delayed recognition.
  • Repressed memory: Some states recognize that trauma can suppress memory of abuse entirely, and that the limitations period does not begin until the memory is recovered. This doctrine is recognized in some jurisdictions but contested in others, and it requires expert support to establish.


Institutional Concealment, Threats, and Equitable Tolling


When an institution actively concealed the abuse or the identity of the perpetrator, equitable tolling may prevent the institution from benefiting from the passage of time. Evidence that a diocese, school, or organization suppressed complaints, transferred perpetrators, or instructed victims to stay silent has supported tolling arguments in multiple states.

Courts may also apply equitable tolling when a victim was prevented from filing by threats from the perpetrator or coercive control by an institution. Emotional distress damages claims arising from sexual abuse frequently implicate the discovery rule because the full psychological harm may not manifest until years after the abuse occurred.

Lookback windows are legislative enactments that temporarily revive civil claims that have already expired. Between 2020 and 2024, the high courts of Utah, Kentucky, and Colorado found that expired statutes of limitations created a vested right that could not be retroactively revived by legislation. In the same timeframe, the supreme courts of Georgia and Vermont ruled the opposite way, with the Louisiana Supreme Court first finding a lookback window unconstitutional before rehearing the case and determining it was in fact constitutional. State supreme courts in Maine, North Carolina, Maryland, and New Hampshire have each issued decisions in 2025, with courts continuing to reach different conclusions. Survivors considering whether to file under an active lookback window should act promptly, as windows that are open today close on fixed legislative dates.



4. . Defense Considerations in Time-Barred Sex Crime Cases


For defendants, the statute of limitations is an affirmative defense that courts do not apply automatically. It must be raised at the appropriate procedural stage, and the analysis is charge-specific and fact-intensive.



Raising the Statute of Limitations As an Affirmative Defense


Criminal defense and trials counsel should analyze the limitations issue at the outset of any sex crime case. The analysis requires identifying the date the alleged offense occurred, confirming the limitations period applicable at the time of the offense and at the time of charging, and identifying any tolling events the prosecution may invoke. For federal charges, determining whether § 3299 applies to the specific offense requires careful examination of which chapter and which statutory provision is charged, because the residual five-year default under § 3282 may apply to specific offenses that are not covered by § 3299 even within the same chapter.

In states that have recently extended or eliminated their criminal limitations periods, defendants should examine whether the new period applies retroactively to conduct that occurred before the amendment, and whether the prior law created an expectation of repose. The Supreme Court's decision in Stogner v. California (2003) held that a state law reviving an already-expired criminal statute of limitations violates the Ex Post Facto Clause. This constitutional limit applies to criminal revival, though courts treat civil revival under different constitutional frameworks.



Retroactivity, Revival Windows, and Constitutional Challenges


Sex crime defendants facing civil claims brought under lookback windows may have constitutional challenges available depending on the state. Where a state supreme court has held that expired limitations periods create vested rights, a civil defendant may challenge the revival window's applicability. Where courts have upheld the revival, the constitutional challenge is unlikely to succeed.

Sexual assault litigation against institutional defendants requires examining both the limitations period for the specific institutional claim and whether any notice-of-claim requirements were satisfied. Sexual assault penalties and sex offender sentencing under state and federal law include mandatory registration requirements, residency restrictions, and civil commitment proceedings that apply independently of the sentence and must be part of any comprehensive defense evaluation.



5. Common Questions about the Statute of Limitations for Sex Crimes


Sex crime limitations questions involve a rapidly shifting patchwork of criminal prosecution windows, civil filing deadlines, and survivor-specific tolling rules that differ sharply from one state to the next. The answers below address what survivors, defendants, and their families most often need to understand at the outset.



What Is the Statute of Limitations for Sex Crimes?


There is no single answer because the deadline depends on four separate variables: whether the case is criminal or civil, which state governs, the victim's age at the time of the offense, and whether any recent legislative reform has extended or eliminated the prior period. Criminal time limits for the most serious offenses against children have been removed in the majority of states. Civil deadlines have been extended or eliminated across a growing number of jurisdictions, and more than 30 states have created mechanisms to revive claims that had already expired. Treating the deadline as fixed without current verification is one of the most common and consequential mistakes survivors and defendants both make.



Are Federal Sex Crimes Always Subject to a Five-Year Deadline?


No. The five-year default under 18 U.S.C. § 3282 applies only where no more specific federal limitations provision governs. Under 18 U.S.C. § 3299, felony offenses under Chapter 109A (sexual abuse), Chapter 110 (child exploitation, except §§ 2257 and 2257A), Chapter 117 (interstate sex offenses), and 18 U.S.C. § 1591 (sex trafficking) may be prosecuted at any time without limitation. This covers a wide range of serious federal sexual offenses against both children and adults. The five-year default remains relevant only for specific offenses not reached by § 3299 or other specialized provisions.



Is There a Statute of Limitations for Childhood Sexual Abuse?


For criminal charges, the vast majority of states and the federal government have removed time limits for prosecuting serious childhood sexual offenses. On the civil side, nearly 20 states have permanently eliminated any deadline for filing suit, while many others allow claims until the victim reaches their 40s or 50s. Where a prior deadline has already run, a state's lookback window may still allow a new lawsuit to be filed within a defined period. What matters most is when the abuse occurred, in which state, and whether that state has enacted any reform that applies retroactively to prior conduct.



Does the Discovery Rule Apply to Sexual Abuse Claims?


It applies broadly in civil proceedings and in some criminal contexts. The core idea is that the filing deadline should not begin until the survivor reasonably could have recognized both the harm and its connection to the defendant's conduct. For survivors of childhood abuse, that moment often arrives during therapy years or decades after the events themselves. Establishing a delayed-discovery argument requires showing why earlier recognition was not reasonable, which typically involves documentation of the psychological impact and the circumstances that delayed disclosure. The plaintiff carries that burden, and it is not automatically satisfied by the passage of time alone.



What Is a Lookback Window and Is One Currently Open in My State?


A lookback window is a time-limited legislative decision to reopen the courthouse to survivors whose claims had already expired. Windows typically last one to three years. California's AB 250 creates a 2026–2027 revival window for certain adult sexual assault civil claims, including claims involving alleged institutional cover-up, but eligibility depends on the defendant, the allegations, and the statutory requirements. Mississippi's window for childhood sexual abuse cases runs through June 2027. Whether any window applies to a specific situation depends on the state, the type of offense, the victim's age, and whether the state's courts have upheld the revival statute. An attorney familiar with current state law is the only reliable source for this determination.



Can Institutional Defendants Be Sued under Extended or Eliminated Statutes?


Often yes, but the rules for suing institutions are frequently different from the rules for suing the individual who committed the abuse. Some states cap institutional liability at a shorter period, require proof of heightened fault such as gross negligence, or impose notice-of-claim requirements with deadlines as short as 90 days when the institution is a government entity. A survivor who can still sue the perpetrator may face a different and sometimes shorter window against the school, church, or organization that employed or supervised that person. These distinctions need to be identified before filing, not after.



What Should a Defendant Do If They Believe a Charge or Civil Claim Is Time-Barred?


Assert the defense through counsel without delay. The statute of limitations does not activate on its own; the defendant must raise it at the right stage of the proceeding. Counsel will need to pinpoint the alleged offense date, identify which period applied under the law then in effect, evaluate whether any tolling doctrine keeps the case alive, and confirm that the charging document or civil complaint was filed within the running period. For federal sex crime charges, counsel must also determine whether § 3299 covers the specific offense charged, because a mistake on that question can be outcome-determinative.


23 Jun, 2026


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