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Future Damages

Future Damages in Alaska

In Alaska, you are entitled to recover not just your current losses but also the present value of future medical expenses and lost earning capacity caused by your injuries. These future damages often represent the largest component of a serious injury claim.

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

Pure comparative fault

Fault System

2 years

Filing Deadline

At-Fault

Auto System

Types of Future Damages in Alaska

Future Medical Expenses

Cost of ongoing treatment, surgeries, physical therapy, medications, home care, and medical equipment you will need because of your injuries.

Lost Future Earning Capacity

The present value of income you will lose if your injury permanently or partially prevents you from working at your pre-accident capacity.

Future Pain & Suffering

Alaska allows recovery of future non-economic damages under pure comparative fault — reduced by your share of fault.

Future Loss of Enjoyment

Compensation for activities, hobbies, and life experiences you will permanently lose due to your injuries.

Alaska Injury Law

Alaska applies pure comparative fault across all personal injury cases, giving injured parties the right to recover compensation even when they share significant responsibility for an accident. Your damages award is simply reduced by the percentage of fault attributed to you. The statute of limitations is 2 years, running from the date of injury or the date the injury was or should have been discovered. Alaska's remote geography and specialized industries — fishing, oil, aviation — create unique personal injury scenarios not common in other states. Workers' compensation is mandatory for most employers and provides medical benefits and wage replacement regardless of fault. Alaska has no cap on compensatory damages, allowing full recovery of economic and noneconomic losses. Punitive damages are available in egregious cases. Medical malpractice claims follow the same 2-year limitation period but have additional procedural prerequisites, including expert affidavit requirements.

Legal Injury GuideFor informational purposes only. Not legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney.