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City Guide · Connecticut

Personal Injury Claims in New Haven, CT

Population

134,000

Avg. Verdict Range

$45,000 - $320,000

New Haven, home to Yale University and a busy port on Long Island Sound, sits where I-91 and I-95 intersect, generating frequent highway and merge collisions. Injury suits are filed in the Connecticut Superior Court for the New Haven Judicial District, with federal cases in the District of Connecticut. The dense urban core and large student population produce many pedestrian, bicycle, and rideshare injury claims, while the medical and manufacturing sectors drive workplace cases. Coastal storms and snowy New England winters contribute to slip-and-fall and icy-road crashes. New Haven residents should note Connecticut's modified comparative fault rule and the short two-year deadline, which makes prompt action essential.

Where Personal Injury Cases Are Filed in New Haven

1

Connecticut Superior Court, Judicial District of New Haven

State Trial Court

2

U.S. District Court for the District of Connecticut

Federal Court

3

Connecticut Appellate Court

State Appellate Court

Most personal injury cases are filed in state trial court. Federal jurisdiction typically requires diversity of citizenship and damages exceeding $75,000.

Connecticut Fault Rules — What This Means for Your Claim

Connecticut follows a modified comparative negligence rule with a 51 percent bar, so an injured person recovers only if their fault is 50 percent or less, with damages reduced by their share. Connecticut imposes no general cap on compensatory damages in most personal injury cases, though punitive damages are limited to litigation costs and attorney fees. The personal injury statute of limitations is two years from the date the injury was sustained or discovered, under Connecticut General Statutes section 52-584.

Read the full Connecticut personal injury law guide →

Average Verdict Range in New Haven

$45,000 - $320,000

General personal injury verdicts in New Haven typically range from $45,000 - $320,000. Actual outcomes depend on injury severity, medical costs, lost income, and the specific facts of each case.

Related Injury Guides

Want to understand all the rules that apply in Connecticut?

Connecticut Personal Injury Law Guide →

Other Connecticut Cities

For informational purposes only. Not legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney.