Losing someone because of another person's negligence is one of the most devastating things a family can go through. And in the middle of grieving, you're suddenly expected to navigate a legal system that's full of terminology, deadlines, and procedural rules most people have never encountered.
One of the most common questions we hear from families in that position is: what can we actually recover?
The honest answer is that New York's wrongful death law gives families a meaningful path to financial recovery, but it has some serious limitations that often come as a shock.
Understanding those limitations, and the compensation that is available, helps families make informed decisions at a time when every decision feels enormous.
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What Is a Wrongful Death Claim in New York?
A wrongful death claim is a civil lawsuit brought when someone dies due to another party's negligence, recklessness, or intentional misconduct. The legal theory is straightforward: if the person had survived their injuries, they could have sued for damages.
Since they didn't survive, their estate can bring that claim on their behalf, and the family members who depended on them can seek compensation for what they lost.
In New York, wrongful death claims are governed by EPTL § 5-4.1, part of the Estates, Powers and Trusts Law. That statute lays out who can file, who can recover, and what the deadlines are. It's a framework that has been in place for over a century, and it shows its age in some ways, as we'll get into below..
Who Can File and Who Actually Receives the Money?
Only the deceased person's personal representative can file a wrongful death lawsuit in New York. That's typically the executor or administrator of their estate, someone appointed through Surrogate's Court. You can't file as a grieving spouse or parent directly; the claim must go through the estate.
Once there's a recovery, the money doesn't necessarily go to whoever filed. Under EPTL Part 4, wrongful death damages are distributed to the decedent's distributees, meaning the people who would inherit under New York's intestacy laws. In practical terms, that's usually a spouse, children, or parents, depending on the family structure. Each distributee receives a share proportional to the financial loss they personally suffered, not necessarily in equal parts.
For example, a surviving spouse with young children and no income of their own would typically receive a larger share of a lost-earnings award than adult children who were financially independent. The court and the parties work through this allocation, which can get complicated in large or blended families.
What Damages Can Families Actually Recover?
This is where many families are surprised, and not always pleasantly.
The Financial Losses New York Compensates
New York's wrongful death statute, EPTL § 5-4.3, defines recoverable damages as "fair and just compensation for the pecuniary injuries resulting from the decedent's death." Pecuniary means financial. The law is focused on money, not grief.
The main categories of financial loss that can be recovered include:
| Category | What It Covers |
| Lost earnings and benefits | Wages, bonuses, health insurance, retirement contributions the decedent would have earned over their expected working life |
| Household services | The dollar value of cooking, cleaning, childcare, home maintenance, and other work the decedent provided to the family |
| Parental guidance and nurture | For minor children, the economic value of the upbringing, education, and guidance they would have received |
| Medical expenses before death | Reasonable costs of emergency care, hospital stays, and treatment related to the fatal injury |
| Funeral and burial expenses | Reasonable costs paid by or owed by family members |
| Pre-judgment interest | Mandatory interest on the total award, running from the date of death under EPTL § 5-4.3(a) |
That last item, pre-judgment interest, is actually a meaningful benefit under New York law compared to many other states. Because wrongful death cases can take years to resolve, and interest accrues from the day of death rather than from the date of judgment, it can add substantially to the final recovery.
Punitive damages are also available in limited circumstances. Under EPTL § 5-4.3(b), if the defendant's conduct was willful, wanton, or egregious enough that punitive damages would have been available if the person had survived, they can be pursued in a wrongful death case too. These aren't awarded often, but they exist.
The Decedent's Conscious Pain and Suffering
New York courts require evidence that the person was actually aware of their suffering. This isn't just a technicality; it shapes how these cases are built. Medical records showing responsiveness, eyewitness accounts, and expert testimony from physicians are all used to establish the nature and duration of conscious suffering.
Even a relatively brief period of awareness can support a significant award, and courts have recognized pre-impact terror, meaning the fear a person experiences in the moments before a fatal impact, as a component of that suffering.
The survival action damages go to the estate and are then distributed differently than wrongful death damages. If you're navigating this as a family, your attorney will need to track these separately from the outset.
What New York Does Not Allow (and Why Families Are Fighting to Change It)
Here's the part that frustrates a lot of families, and understandably so.
Under current New York law, surviving family members cannot recover for their own grief, emotional anguish, or loss of companionship. A parent who loses a child cannot receive compensation for the heartbreak of that loss.
A spouse cannot recover for the companionship, love, and partnership they've been robbed of. The NYC Bar Association explains it plainly: survivors cannot recover for their pain and suffering, meaning their grief, under current law.
This makes New York one of the most restrictive states in the country when it comes to wrongful death. Most other states allow some version of non-economic damages for surviving family members.
Advocates, attorneys, and lawmakers have been pushing back against this for years through legislation known as the Grieving Families Act. The bill, which has gone through multiple versions in the state legislature, would expand New York's wrongful death statute to allow recovery for grief, anguish, loss of love, society, comfort, and companionship.
It would also broaden who can recover, potentially including domestic partners, step-parents, and siblings, rather than only those who qualify under intestacy rules.
The New York Assembly bill A05612 and companion Senate bills have passed versions of this legislation, but the governor has not signed them into law as of 2026. The official text of EPTL § 5-4.3 still limits recovery to pecuniary losses and the specific add-ons discussed above. The reform effort is alive and ongoing, and it's worth following if you have a stake in this area of law.
How Courts Actually Calculate What a Life Was Worth
The New York Pattern Jury Instructions (PJI 2:320) guide how juries are instructed to approach these calculations. Jurors are told to award "fair and just compensation" for pecuniary injuries and to consider the family relationship, the decedent's habits, and their expected future contributions.
For pain and suffering, juries are told there's no precise formula and to use their common sense and the evidence before them.
Under CPLR § 4111, wrongful death verdicts must be itemized, meaning the jury specifies how much they're awarding for each category of loss.
New York has no statutory cap on wrongful death damages. Unlike many states that limit how much a family can recover, New York does not impose a ceiling, and the state constitution has been interpreted to prohibit certain types of damage caps.
High-value cases involving significant economic loss can result in substantial verdicts.
Are There Different Rules When a Government Agency Is Involved?
Yes, and missing these rules can end your case before it begins.
A Notice of Claim must generally be filed within 90 days of the fatal incident (or in some cases, within 90 days of the estate representative's appointment).
This written notice formally alerts the government to the claim and describes what happened. Without it, the lawsuit cannot go forward.
After filing the notice, the claimant must typically wait 30 days before filing suit, giving the municipality a chance to investigate or settle. And in many cases involving city agencies, the entire lawsuit must be filed within one year and 90 days of the accident, which is a shorter window than the general two-year limit under EPTL § 5-4.1.
How Long Do You Have to File?
The general statute of limitations for wrongful death in New York is two years from the date of death, under EPTL § 5-4.1. Missing that deadline typically means the case is gone, regardless of how strong the facts are.
There are limited exceptions. When a related criminal proceeding is pending, some practitioners note the possibility of an extended window to file, though that requires careful legal analysis. The rules differ when minor children are the primary beneficiaries.
And as discussed, government defendants come with their own, much shorter notice requirements.
The two-year clock can feel like a long time when you're in the early stages of grief and estate administration, but wrongful death investigations require gathering records, retaining experts, identifying witnesses, and building economic models. Waiting until the last minute puts all of that under pressure.
Need Help With Wrongful Death Damages in New York?
Our experienced attorneys help families pursue maximum compensation. Call 833-PORTER9 now for a free, no-obligation consultation.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I sue for wrongful death if my loved one had no income?
Yes. Lost earnings are just one component of a wrongful death claim. Even if the deceased was unemployed, retired, or a stay-at-home parent, their household contributions, childcare, and services to the family can be assigned a financial value and recovered. Courts have consistently recognized that unpaid labor has real economic worth.
What if the person who died was partly at fault for the accident?
New York follows a pure comparative negligence rule, meaning a claim can still go forward even if the deceased was partially responsible. Any damages awarded would be reduced by the percentage of fault attributed to the decedent. So if they were found 30% at fault, the recovery would be reduced by 30%. It does not eliminate the case.
Does it matter if there was no will?
Not for purposes of who can recover. Wrongful death damages are distributed based on New York's intestacy laws, not the contents of a will. The personal representative still needs to be appointed through Surrogate's Court, but the absence of a will does not bar the family from bringing a claim.
Can multiple family members receive compensation from the same case?
Yes. A spouse, children, and in some circumstances parents can all receive a share of the wrongful death award, each in proportion to the financial loss they personally suffered. The allocation is worked out as part of the case and, if necessary, determined by the court.
What happens to the money from a survival action vs. the wrongful death claim?
They go to different places. Wrongful death damages are paid to the distributees, meaning the family members who suffered financial loss. Survival action damages, which cover the deceased's own pain and suffering before death, go to the estate and are distributed according to the will or intestacy rules. Your attorney will track these separately throughout the case.
Is there a cap on how much a family can recover?
No. New York does not impose a statutory ceiling on wrongful death damages, and the state constitution has been interpreted to restrict legislative attempts to cap certain damage awards. The amount a family can recover depends on the facts of the case, the extent of the financial loss, and the evidence presented.
What if we can't afford an attorney?
Most wrongful death attorneys, including Porter Law Group, handle these cases on a contingency fee basis. That means there are no upfront legal fees. The attorney is paid a percentage of the recovery only if the case succeeds. There is no cost to consult with us about your situation.
Summing It Up
New York wrongful death law gives families a real legal remedy, but it has significant limitations that are worth understanding clearly before making any decisions.
The core of what's available is financial: lost earnings, household services, parental guidance for children, medical and funeral expenses, and mandatory interest from the date of death. In egregious cases, punitive damages are on the table. Through the survival action, families can also recover for the conscious pain and suffering the deceased experienced before dying.
What New York does not allow, at least under current law, is recovery for the emotional toll on surviving family members. No grief. No loss of companionship. Just economic loss. That rule is under legislative pressure, and reform may come, but it hasn't yet.
If you're dealing with the death of someone close to you and you believe it was caused by another party's negligence, the most useful thing you can do right now is talk to an attorney who handles these cases..
Authored by Michael Porter, J.D., and Eric Nordby, J.D., co-founders of Porter Law Group, licensed to practice in New York State.







