Skip to main content

New Hampshire law

Medical Malpractice Laws in New Hampshire.

New Hampshire medical malpractice claims follow the same 3-year statute of limitations as general personal injury under RSA 508:4. The state's specific medical malpractice statute of limitations (RSA 507-C:4) was declared unconstitutional by the New Hampshire Supreme Court in Carson v. Maurer (1980). Likewise, the statutory cap on noneconomic damages in medical malpractice cases (RSA 507-C:7) was struck down as unconstitutional. New Hampshire repealed its pre-trial screening panel requirement effective July 1, 2023. The same modified comparative fault rules apply as in general personal injury.

Last verified: 2026-02-25

State law

Statute of Limitations

Medical malpractice claims must be filed within 3 years of the act or omission. The specific medical malpractice SOL in RSA 507-C:4 was declared unconstitutional by the NH Supreme Court in Carson v. Maurer (1980), so the general personal injury statute of limitations applies.

Exceptions

Discovery Rule3 years from discoveryRSA 508:4, I

When the injury was not and could not reasonably have been discovered at the time of the malpractice, the 3-year period runs from the date of discovery.

MinorsTolled until age 18, then 3 yearsRSA 508:8

The statute of limitations is tolled for minor patients until they reach age 18.

State law

Fault & Liability Rules

Modified Comparative Fault (51% Bar)RSA 507:7-d

The same comparative fault rules apply as in general personal injury. If the patient is 51% or more at fault (rare in medical malpractice), they recover nothing.

State law

Damage Caps

Compensatory Damages: No cap

New Hampshire does not cap compensatory damages in medical malpractice cases.

Noneconomic Damages: No cap (statutory cap struck down)RSA 507-C:7 (unconstitutional)

The legislature attempted to cap noneconomic damages at $250,000 under RSA 507-C:7, but the New Hampshire Supreme Court struck this down as unconstitutional in Carson v. Maurer (1980). No cap is currently in effect.

Punitive Damages: Not allowedRSA 507:16

Punitive damages are prohibited by statute in New Hampshire, including in medical malpractice cases.

State law

Filing Requirements

Pre-Trial Screening Panel (Repealed)

New Hampshire repealed its mandatory pre-trial screening panel requirement effective July 1, 2023. Medical malpractice claims now proceed directly to court without a screening panel step.

State law

Key New Hampshire Statutes

Medical Malpractice Act (Partially Unconstitutional)RSA 507-C

New Hampshire's Medical Malpractice Act (RSA 507-C) remains in the statutes, but key provisions including the statute of limitations (507-C:4) and damage cap (507-C:7) have been declared unconstitutional by the NH Supreme Court. The general personal injury statutes apply instead.

Informed ConsentRSA 507-C:2

Healthcare providers must obtain informed consent before treatment. Failure to adequately inform a patient of the risks, benefits, and alternatives to a procedure can be the basis for a malpractice claim.

State law

Official Sources

Not Legal Advice

This page summarizes publicly available statutes and rules for informational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice, and no attorney-client relationship is created by viewing this content. Laws change — always verify with the primary source or consult a licensed attorney in New Hampshire.

Also in the directory

Browse attorneys for this issue in New Hampshire.

Browse Medical Malpractice attorneys

More in New Hampshire

Other state law topics.

Personal Injury Laws·Criminal Defense Laws·Family Laws·Immigration Laws·Employment Laws·Bankruptcy Laws·Workers' Compensation Laws·Social Security Disability Laws·Wrongful Death Laws·Product Liability Laws·Long-Term Disability & ERISA Laws·Estate Planning Laws·Probate Laws·Real Estate Laws·Landlord & Tenant Laws·Business Laws·Intellectual Property Laws·Tax Laws·Elder Laws·Nursing Home Abuse & Neglect Laws·Civil Rights Laws·Domestic Violence Laws·Veterans Legal Services Laws·Healthcare & Benefits Laws·Construction Defect Laws·Insurance Disputes Laws·Premises Liability Laws·Commercial Litigation Laws·Environmental Laws·Securities & Finance Laws·Municipal Laws·Administrative Laws

FlowLawyers Logo
FlowLawyersAccess to Justice

Browse the legal platform.

Browse attorneys by state and practice area, explore legal aid resources, and access state law and legal education in one place.

Attorney Advertising Disclosure

ATTORNEY ADVERTISING. FlowLegal Partners LLC is an attorney directory and advertising platform dedicated to improving access to legal representation across the United States. We are not a law firm and do not operate as a lawyer referral service. We do not practice law, evaluate legal matters, provide legal advice, make legal judgments, or recommend or endorse any specific attorney. AI-generated work product requires attorney review and approval before use. Attorney supervision of all AI output is required and is the sole responsibility of the subscribing firm. Attorneys may pay for enhanced directory listings and advertising placement. The presence of an attorney on our platform does not constitute an endorsement or recommendation. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome.

© 2025–2026 FlowLegal Partners LLC