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New Jersey Slip and Fall Settlement Calculator

Estimate New Jersey slip-and-fall settlement — SOL, Modified Comparative Fault (51%), Unified Duty Standard

Last reviewed: April 2026

🏙️ NEW JERSEY: SOL | Modified Comparative Fault (51%) | Unified Duty Standard

$209 billion in real payouts analyzed · See what we found
Reviewed by Leonard Goldberg, Editor
Last updated May 15, 2026
See methodology →
Step 1 of 3

Your Injury

$

Your Estimated Settlement

$36,000 — $66,000

Pain & Suffering
$45,000
Medical Bills
$15,000
Lost Wages
$5,000
Out-of-Pocket
$1,000

Total (mid-range)$51,000
Estimate based on the industry-standard multiplier method used by insurance adjusters and personal injury attorneys nationwide
Real Data

Slip & Fall Settlement Data

Based on 7,619 real payments totaling $568.6M from municipal slip & fall and sidewalk claims.

Average

$75K

Median

$30K

25th %ile

$10K

90th %ile

$175K

Payment DistributionYour estimate: 62nd percentile
$3K$30K$275K

Source: NYC Comptroller, Chicago City, Philadelphia Law Dept.. Actual payouts may vary based on individual circumstances.

Get Your Premises Liability Report

Slip & fall outcomes hinge on property type, notice of hazard, and your state's premises liability law. Free state-specific report by email.

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Editorially Reviewed — Content reviewed for accuracy using published legal research, government data, and verified court records. See our methodology

Reviewed by Leonard Goldberg, Editor · Last updated May 15, 2026

New Jersey Slip and Fall Law

New Jersey premises liability is governed by N.J.S.A. 2A:14-2 (SOL): 2 years from date of injury. Government claims: Notice of Claim within 90 days under 59:8-8 or claim barred (court may permit late filing within 1 year).

Modified Comparative Fault (51%) (N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.1 to -5.3): Barred at 51%+ fault; damages reduced below. Fault apportioned among all parties including settled defendants.

Unified Duty Standard (Hopkins v. Fox & Lazo Realtors, 132 N.J. 426 (1993)): NJ Supreme Court moved from strict categories to multi-factor fairness: foreseeability, relationship, risk nature, ability to exercise care. Landmark shift: visitor status is one factor, not determinative. Social guests/licensees may be owed higher duty than common-law default.

Key New Jersey Slip and Fall Statutes

New Jersey premises liability operates under these critical legal rules:

N.J.S.A. 2A:14-2

SOL

Standard: 2 years from date of injury

Scope: Government claims: Notice of Claim within 90 days under 59:8-8 or claim barred (court may permit late filing within 1 year).

N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.1 to -5.3

Modified Comparative Fault (51%)

Standard: Barred at 51%+ fault; damages reduced below

Scope: Fault apportioned among all parties including settled defendants.

Hopkins v. Fox & Lazo Realtors, 132 N.J. 426 (1993)

Unified Duty Standard

Standard: NJ Supreme Court moved from strict categories to multi-factor fairness: foreseeability, relationship, risk nature, ability to exercise care

Scope: Landmark shift: visitor status is one factor, not determinative. Social guests/licensees may be owed higher duty than common-law default.

N.J.S.A. 59:1-1 et seq. — NJ Tort Claims Act

Government Entity 90-Day Notice

Standard: Notice of Claim must be filed with public entity within 90 days of incident

Scope: Late filing permitted up to 1 year with court approval if no substantial prejudice. Public entities retain significant immunity.

Nisivoccia v. Glass Gardens, 175 N.J. 559 (2003)

Mode of Operation Doctrine

Standard: In self-service retail, no notice requirement if mode makes dangerous conditions foreseeable

Scope: Three reqs: self-service business, incident location related to self-service, nexus to mode. NJ Supreme Court subsequently narrowed.

Recovery Structure

Medical expenses, lost wages, future care, pain and suffering, loss of consortium. Most states require plaintiff to show actual or constructive notice of the dangerous condition.

Key New Jersey Doctrines

Government Entity 90-Day Notice: Notice of Claim must be filed with public entity within 90 days of incident. Mode of Operation Doctrine: In self-service retail, no notice requirement if mode makes dangerous conditions foreseeable

Damage Structure + Caps

Economic (medical, lost wages), non-economic (pain & suffering), possible punitive

New Jersey Slip and Fall Verdicts + Averages

Recent New Jersey premises liability outcomes:

AmountYearCase / Injury
$440K2024NJ Condo Association — failure to maintain safe premises
$400K2024Tenant v. apartment complex — pothole exit, trimalleolar fracture
$275K2023Commercial falldown — tripped on shoes in dept store aisle, mediation
$200K2023Hotel shower fall — humerus fracture

New Jersey Slip and Fall FAQs

What is the statute of limitations for slip-and-fall in New Jersey?

The SOL in New Jersey is 2 years (N.J.S.A. 2A:14-2); Government claims: 90-day Notice of Claim. For minors, the clock typically tolls until age 18. Against government entities, most states require a short pre-filing notice — verify before filing.

What is New Jersey's comparative fault rule?

NJ uses modified comparative (51%). Unique to NJ: Hopkins v. Fox & Lazo (1993) replaced rigid visitor classifications with a multi-factor fairness test — foreseeability, relationship, risk, ability to exercise care. This affects every settlement negotiation because your fault percentage directly reduces recovery.

How much is a typical New Jersey slip-and-fall settlement worth?

Settlement ranges vary by injury severity: minor soft-tissue injuries typically $10K-$40K, moderate injuries with surgery $50K-$150K, severe permanent disability $200K-$1M+. See landmark verdicts section for real New Jersey examples.

Do I need to sue or can I settle with insurance?

Most slip-and-fall cases settle with the property owner's insurance before trial. Filing a lawsuit is typically a leverage tool — roughly 90-95% of cases resolve pre-trial. However, you must file before the SOL expires to preserve leverage.

What evidence is critical for my New Jersey slip-fall case?

Photos of the hazard (with a measuring reference for size), medical records documenting injuries + causation, witness statements, incident reports, any prior complaints about the same hazard, and proof of lost wages. Preserve evidence immediately — the defendant will likely fix the hazard quickly.

Pending New Jersey Slip and Fall Issues

Active legal developments (as of April 2026):

  • Hopkins multi-factor test is flexible and fact-intensive — outcome prediction harder than strict status-based states.
  • Mode of operation doctrine actively litigated — NJ Supreme Court progressively narrowed after Nisivoccia; each retail context requires fresh analysis.
  • NJ Tort Claims Act imposes strict immunities for public entity property conditions, especially sidewalks.

Informational only — consult a licensed attorney for case-specific advice.

Primary Sources

  • law.justia.com/cases/new-jersey/supreme-court/1993/132-n-j-426.html
  • www.lutzlegal.com/the-new-jersey-tort-claims-act-n-j-s-a-591-1-et-seq
  • reinartzlaw.com/mode-operation-doctrine-new-jersey-slip-fall-cases

Other State Slip and Fall Calculators

New York

Pure comparative, 3-yr SOL, 90-day Notice of Claim municipal, trivial defect

California

Pure comparative, 2-yr SOL, Rowland 18-factor test, 6-mo gov claims

Florida

HB 837 51% bar, 2-yr SOL (was 4), §768.0755 notice required

Ohio

Modified 51%, open-and-obvious retained, §2744 government immunity

Main Slip & Fall Calculator

Nationwide premises liability overview

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Other Calculators for New Jersey

Each New Jersey calculator reflects state-specific laws (caps, statutes of limitations, comparative-negligence rules) and uses New Jersey verdict data where available.

New Jersey Car Accident Settlement Calculator →New Jersey Workers' Compensation Calculator →New Jersey Slip & Fall Settlement Calculator →New Jersey Dog Bite Settlement Calculator →New Jersey Sexual Abuse Settlement Calculator →

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Settlement Insight is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. All settlement data is derived from public government records. Estimates are illustrative and not a guarantee of any outcome — your actual case value depends on jurisdiction, liability, and insurance limits.

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