State guide — TX

Medical Malpractice Lawyers in Texas

A plain-language guide to Texas medical malpractice law — filing deadlines, damage caps, and pre-suit rules patients and families should understand before contacting an attorney.

Last reviewed: · Reviewed by our editorial team.

Medical malpractice law guide for Texas

Direct answer

In Texas, medical malpractice claims are governed by state-specific filing deadlines, damage caps, and pre-suit rules. Generally 2 years from act or last treatment; 10-year repose. Non-economic damages capped per provider and per facility under Chapter 74. A free case review can clarify how these rules apply to your situation.
Legal accuracy notice. The Texas statute-of-limitations, damage-cap, and pre-suit summaries on this page are general editorial guidance and may be out of date. State law changes through legislation and court decisions. Do not rely on these summaries to determine a filing deadline or case value — confirm the current rule with a Texas-licensed attorney before taking action.

Statute of limitations

Filing deadline

Generally 2 years from act or last treatment; 10-year repose.

Damage caps

Limits on recovery

Non-economic damages capped per provider and per facility under Chapter 74.

Pre-suit requirements

Procedural rules

Expert report required within 120 days of answer.

Medical malpractice law in Texas

Texas sees medical malpractice claims arising from hospitals, clinics, and surgical centers across the state, including in Houston and Dallas. The same four elements apply everywhere: a provider-patient relationship, a breach of the accepted standard of care, causation, and real damages. State law then governs how — and how quickly — a claim must be brought.

Key Texas rules patients should know:

For deeper detail, see our medical malpractice statute of limitations guide, medical malpractice payouts by state, compensation and damage caps overview, and how medical malpractice lawsuits work. For specific claim categories, browse all medical malpractice claim types or read our medical-legal glossary.

Claims we review in Texas

Common medical malpractice claims

Texas FAQs

Common questions about Texas malpractice law

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