Lost Wages in a Nebraska Personal Injury Claim
If an injury caused by another party's negligence forced you out of work in Nebraska, you can recover lost wages and future earning capacity as part of your claim. Here is exactly how to document, calculate, and recover your income losses.
For informational purposes only. Not legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney.
Modified comparative fault (50% bar)
Fault System
4 years
Filing Deadline
At-Fault
Auto System
What Lost Wages You Can Recover in Nebraska
Past Lost Wages
All income you lost from the date of the accident through settlement or verdict — including salary, hourly wages, tips, commissions, bonuses, and self-employment income.
Future Lost Earnings
If your injury causes permanent or long-term disability affecting your ability to work, you can recover the present value of future income losses. Expert economic testimony is typically required.
Lost Business Income
Self-employed individuals and business owners can claim documented lost profits caused by their inability to work.
Benefits & PTO Used
Sick days, vacation days, and other benefits consumed due to your injury may be recoverable as lost wages.
No-Fault vs At-Fault in Nebraska
Nebraska Injury Law
Nebraska uses modified comparative fault with a 50% bar — the same threshold as a handful of other states that use 50% rather than 51%, meaning plaintiffs who are exactly equally at fault as the defendant cannot recover. The 4-year statute of limitations is more generous than most states. Nebraska does not require no-fault PIP insurance. Nebraska's agricultural economy produces significant farm equipment accident and livestock-related injury litigation. Nebraska courts apply the comparative fault rule in product liability cases as well. Nebraska has no general cap on compensatory damages, though noneconomic damages in medical malpractice cases are capped at $1.75 million under the Nebraska Hospital-Medical Liability Act. Punitive damages are not available in Nebraska under state constitutional interpretation, which distinguishes it from most other states. Claims against the state government are handled through the Nebraska State Tort Claims Act with specific procedural requirements.