OH · Filing Deadlines
Ohio Statute of Limitations
Filing deadlines for every common civil claim in Ohio — personal injury, medical malpractice, contracts, fraud, employment, defamation, and more. Each row cites the controlling statute.
| Claim type | Deadline | Statute & notes |
|---|---|---|
|
Personal Injury
Bodily injury claims arising from negligence — car accidents, slip-and-falls, dog bites. Generally counted from the date of the injury, sometimes from discovery.
|
2 years
|
Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.10 ↗
Two years from the date of the injury for most Ohio personal-injury claims. Political-subdivision claims under the Political Subdivision Tort Liability Act require additional notice steps.
Reviewed Jun 2026
|
|
Medical Malpractice
Negligence claims against medical professionals. Most states use a discovery rule plus a statute of repose ceiling. Specialized notice-of-intent requirements often apply.
|
1 year
4-year statute of repose
|
Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.113 ↗
One year from when the patient discovered or should have discovered the injury, with a four-year statute of repose. 180-day extension available with proper pre-suit notice.
Reviewed Jun 2026
|
|
Wrongful Death
Survivor claims for death caused by another's negligence or intentional act. Generally measured from date of death, not date of underlying injury.
|
2 years
|
Ohio Rev. Code § 2125.02 ↗
Two years from the date of death for wrongful-death claims in Ohio.
Reviewed Jun 2026
|
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Product Liability
Claims that a defective product caused injury or damage. Most states use a discovery rule with a separate statute of repose for products.
|
2 years
10-year statute of repose
|
Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.10; § 2305.10(C) ↗
Two years for product-liability injury claims, with a 10-year statute of repose from the date of delivery to the first end-user.
Reviewed Jun 2026
|
|
Breach of Written Contract
Claims for breach of a contract that is reduced to writing. Generally longer than oral contracts. Note: signed agreements may have additional periods.
|
8 years
|
Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.06 ↗
Eight years from breach to sue on a written contract in Ohio (reduced from 15 years in 2012).
Reviewed Jun 2026
|
|
Breach of Oral Contract
Claims for breach of an unwritten oral agreement. Generally shorter periods than written contracts.
|
6 years
|
Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.07 ↗
Six years for oral contracts in Ohio.
Reviewed Jun 2026
|
|
Fraud
Claims of intentional misrepresentation. Most states apply a discovery rule — the clock starts when the fraud is discovered or reasonably should have been.
|
4 years
Discovery rule applies
|
Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.09 ↗
Four years from when the fraud was or should have been discovered.
Reviewed Jun 2026
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|
Defamation (Libel & Slander)
Claims for libel (written) or slander (spoken) defamation. Typically short statutes. Some states apply a single-publication rule for online content.
|
1 year
|
Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.11 ↗
One year for libel or slander in Ohio, applying the single-publication rule to internet content.
Reviewed Jun 2026
|
|
Employment Discrimination
Claims under Title VII / ADA / ADEA require an EEOC charge typically within 180 or 300 days, plus a 90-day window to sue after right-to-sue notice. State-law parallels may differ.
|
10 months
EEOC: 300 days; OCRC: 2 years
|
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(e)(1); Ohio Rev. Code § 4112.05 ↗
Federal claims require an EEOC charge within 300 days. The Ohio Civil Rights Commission allows charges up to two years after the discriminatory act (extended 2021).
Reviewed Jun 2026
|
|
Wrongful Termination
Claims for unlawful firing — discrimination, retaliation, public-policy, or contract-based. Period depends on the underlying legal theory.
|
4 years
Whistleblower / public-policy
|
Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.07 ↗
Four years for whistleblower or public-policy wrongful-termination claims in Ohio.
Reviewed Jun 2026
|
|
Property Damage
Claims for damage to real or personal property — vehicle crashes, vandalism, trespass, conversion. Some states distinguish negligence from intentional damage.
|
4 years
|
Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.09 ↗
Four years for damage to or conversion of personal property in Ohio.
Reviewed Jun 2026
|
|
Debt Collection
Time within which a creditor must sue to collect an unpaid debt. Expiration generally bars a lawsuit but does not erase the debt; partial payment may reset the clock.
|
8 years
|
Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.06 ↗
Eight years for written contract debt in Ohio. Credit-card debt is generally treated as written.
Reviewed Jun 2026
|
|
Ozempic / Mounjaro Lawsuit Deadlines
GLP-1 receptor agonist (Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro, Rybelsus, Trulicity) lawsuits generally follow the state's product-liability statute of limitations, with a discovery-rule extension that begins running when the patient learns of the injury.
|
2 years
Discovery rule typically extends this period from the date of diagnosis. 10-year statute of repose
|
Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.10; § 2305.10(C) ↗
Ozempic / GLP-1 lawsuits in this state typically use the product-liability deadline: Two years for product-liability injury claims, with a 10-year statute of repose from the date of delivery to the first end-user.
Reviewed Jun 2026
|
|
Hair Relaxer Cancer Lawsuit Deadlines
Hair-relaxer cancer claims (MDL 3060) follow the state's product-liability statute of limitations, often extended by the discovery rule from the date of cancer diagnosis.
|
2 years
Discovery rule typically extends this period from the date of cancer diagnosis. 10-year statute of repose
|
Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.10; § 2305.10(C) ↗
Hair-relaxer cancer claims in this state typically use the product-liability deadline: Two years for product-liability injury claims, with a 10-year statute of repose from the date of delivery to the first end-user.
Reviewed Jun 2026
|
|
Tesla Autopilot Accident Lawsuit Deadlines
Tesla Autopilot and FSD product-liability personal-injury claims follow the state's personal-injury statute of limitations from the date of the crash.
|
2 years
Discovery rule may apply when the driver-assistance system's role is uncovered later.
|
Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.10 ↗
Tesla Autopilot / FSD crashes in this state typically use the personal-injury deadline: Two years from the date of the injury for most Ohio personal-injury claims. Political-subdivision claims under the Political Subdivision Tort Liability Act require additional notice steps.
Reviewed Jun 2026
|
|
Vaping / JUUL Lawsuit Deadlines
Vaping and JUUL personal-injury claims follow the state's product-liability or personal-injury statute of limitations, typically extended by the discovery rule for EVALI and seizures.
|
2 years
Discovery rule applies for EVALI and other latent injuries. 10-year statute of repose
|
Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.10; § 2305.10(C) ↗
Vaping / JUUL personal-injury claims in this state typically use the product-liability deadline: Two years for product-liability injury claims, with a 10-year statute of repose from the date of delivery to the first end-user.
Reviewed Jun 2026
|
|
Talc / Baby Powder Cancer Lawsuit Deadlines
Talc lawsuits (J&J baby powder, Shower-to-Shower) generally follow the state's product-liability statute of limitations with a discovery rule from the date of ovarian-cancer or mesothelioma diagnosis.
|
2 years
Discovery rule typically extends this period from the date of ovarian-cancer or mesothelioma diagnosis. 10-year statute of repose
|
Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.10; § 2305.10(C) ↗
Talc / Baby Powder cancer claims in this state typically use the product-liability deadline: Two years for product-liability injury claims, with a 10-year statute of repose from the date of delivery to the first end-user.
Reviewed Jun 2026
|
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Tylenol / Acetaminophen Autism Lawsuit Deadlines
Tylenol autism / ADHD lawsuits (MDL 3043) generally follow the state's product-liability statute of limitations, with a discovery rule from the date of the child's diagnosis.
|
2 years
Discovery rule typically extends this period from the date of the child's diagnosis. Note: minors get additional tolling in most states. 10-year statute of repose
|
Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.10; § 2305.10(C) ↗
Tylenol autism / ADHD claims in this state typically use the product-liability deadline: Two years for product-liability injury claims, with a 10-year statute of repose from the date of delivery to the first end-user.
Reviewed Jun 2026
|
|
AFFF Firefighting Foam Lawsuit Deadlines
AFFF PFAS lawsuits (MDL 2873) generally follow the state's product-liability statute of limitations, with a discovery rule from the date the PFAS-related illness was diagnosed.
|
2 years
Discovery rule typically extends this period from the date the PFAS-related illness was diagnosed. 10-year statute of repose
|
Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.10; § 2305.10(C) ↗
AFFF / PFAS claims in this state typically use the product-liability deadline: Two years for product-liability injury claims, with a 10-year statute of repose from the date of delivery to the first end-user.
Reviewed Jun 2026
|
|
Paraquat Parkinson's Lawsuit Deadlines
Paraquat lawsuits (MDL 3004) generally follow the state's product-liability statute of limitations, with a discovery rule from the date of Parkinson's diagnosis.
|
2 years
Discovery rule typically extends this period from the date of Parkinson's diagnosis. 10-year statute of repose
|
Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.10; § 2305.10(C) ↗
Paraquat Parkinson's claims in this state typically use the product-liability deadline: Two years for product-liability injury claims, with a 10-year statute of repose from the date of delivery to the first end-user.
Reviewed Jun 2026
|
|
Roundup Cancer Lawsuit Deadlines
Roundup non-Hodgkin's lymphoma lawsuits generally follow the state's product-liability statute of limitations, with a discovery rule from the date of NHL diagnosis.
|
2 years
Discovery rule typically extends this period from the date of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma diagnosis. 10-year statute of repose
|
Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.10; § 2305.10(C) ↗
Roundup NHL claims in this state typically use the product-liability deadline: Two years for product-liability injury claims, with a 10-year statute of repose from the date of delivery to the first end-user.
Reviewed Jun 2026
|
|
Uber / Lyft Accident Lawsuit Deadlines
Rideshare-accident personal-injury claims follow the state's personal-injury statute of limitations from the date of the crash.
|
2 years
Coverage tier depends on driver's phase; arbitration clauses may shorten the effective window.
|
Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.10 ↗
Uber / Lyft accident claims in this state typically use the personal-injury deadline: Two years from the date of the injury for most Ohio personal-injury claims. Political-subdivision claims under the Political Subdivision Tort Liability Act require additional notice steps.
Reviewed Jun 2026
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Important: Statutes of limitations have many exceptions — discovery rules, tolling for minors, ongoing-treatment doctrines, and notice requirements for government defendants. This page is general legal information, not legal advice. Talk to a licensed Ohio attorney before relying on any deadline.