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New York Dog Bite Settlement Calculator

Estimate NY dog bite settlement — MAJOR 2025 change: Flanders v. Goodfellow overruled Bard v. Jahnke, permitting negligence claims alongside vicious propensity strict liability

Last reviewed: April 2026

🚨 NY CRITICAL 2025 CHANGE: Flanders v. Goodfellow (Court of Appeals, April 2025) overruled Bard v. Jahnke. Plaintiffs NOW have vicious propensity + NEGLIGENCE claim paths. Highest US payouts.

$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

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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 York Dog Bite Law — Transformed by Flanders (2025)

APRIL 17, 2025: Flanders v. Goodfellow (NY Court of Appeals) FUNDAMENTALLY CHANGED New York dog bite law. Before Flanders: 'one bite' rule — plaintiffs had to prove owner knew (or should have known) of the dog's vicious propensities under Collier v. Zambito (2004). Major barrier for plaintiffs. After Flanders: plaintiffs can now pursue BOTH vicious propensity strict liability AND negligence claims. The prior rule barring negligence claims for domestic animal injuries (Bard v. Jahnke) was EXPRESSLY OVERRULED.

This is the single most important NY dog bite development in 20 years. New York now substantially aligns with most other states — plaintiffs have multiple claim paths, not just the restrictive vicious propensity path. A postal worker bitten by the Goodfellow family dog brought the case; the court held plaintiffs can plead negligence for owner's failure to exercise reasonable care, without needing to prove prior vicious behavior.

SOL: 3 years under CPLR §214. Tolled for minors until 18. No damages cap. NY has the highest average dog bite payouts nationally: $110,500 (2024, III data) — highest of all states. NYC verdicts run 25-30% higher than upstate. Dangerous dog statute (NY Agric. & Mkts. Law §123) allows local court declaration after hearing — creates direct evidence of owner knowledge for future civil claims.

Key NY Dog Bite Law

Post-Flanders, NY has a dual-path liability framework:

Flanders v. Goodfellow, 2025 NY Ct. App.

CRITICAL 2025 CASE — Negligence Claim NOW Available

Standard: Strict Liability (vicious propensity) + Negligence

Scope: Decided April 17, 2025. Overruled Bard v. Jahnke. Plaintiffs can now pursue BOTH vicious propensity strict liability AND negligence claims. Major expansion of plaintiff rights.

Single most important NY dog bite development in 20 years

Common law + Collier v. Zambito (2004)

Vicious Propensity Rule (still valid)

Standard: Strict liability if owner knew/should have known of dog's vicious propensities

Scope: Pre-Flanders rule — still available as one of two claim paths

CPLR §214

SOL

Standard: 3 years from bite date

Scope: Longer than CA/IL/TX; shorter than FL

NY Agric. & Mkts. Law §123

Dangerous Dog Statute

Scope: Court-declared dangerous dog status = evidence of owner knowledge in civil claims

Recovery Structure

Economic damages: medical, lost wages, future care — no cap. Non-economic: pain & suffering, scarring, PTSD — NO cap. Punitive damages: rare in dog bite, available for egregious conduct. Comparative fault: PURE comparative (CPLR Article 14-A) — plaintiff recovers at any fault level below 100%. No 50% bar. Homeowner's insurance: typical $100K-$300K. Attorney fees: standard contingency. Municipal defendants: 90-day Notice of Claim required under GML §50-e.

Flanders Dual-Path Framework

Pre-Flanders (still available — vicious propensity path): owner strictly liable IF owner knew or should have known of dog's vicious propensities. Evidence: prior bites, aggressive incidents, breed/size, prior complaints, warning signs. High bar — many plaintiffs could not prove prior knowledge. Post-Flanders (NEW — negligence path): plaintiff can plead negligence — owner failed to exercise reasonable care, no prior vicious history required. Examples: failure to restrain in public, failure to enclose in yard, knowingly leaving unattended with children. Provocation: remains a defense. Dangerous dog declarations (Agric. & Mkts. Law §123): court declaration admissible as evidence of knowledge. Landlord liability: negligence-based — actual knowledge + ability to address.

Damage Caps (None)

No statutory damage caps on dog bite claims in New York. Non-economic damages uncapped — driver of NY's highest-in-US average payouts. Punitive damages rare, uncapped statutorily. NYC municipal claims: 90-day Notice of Claim + 1 year 90 day lawsuit deadline under GML §50-e (fatal if missed). Homeowner's insurance limits typical $100K-$300K — excess coverage rare. Severe-injury cases routinely exceed policy limits; defendant's personal assets exposed post-verdict.

NY Dog Bite Verdicts + Averages

NY has highest average dog bite payouts nationally; Flanders expected to increase further:

AmountYearCase / Injury
$500K— — Severe/disfiguring attack
$150K— — Moderate — NY significantly higher than other states
$111K2024
$50K— — Typical moderate bite (stitches)

New York Dog Bite FAQs (Post-Flanders)

What did Flanders v. Goodfellow change about NY dog bite law?

BEFORE April 2025: NY followed 'one bite' rule under Collier v. Zambito — plaintiffs had to prove owner KNEW (or should have known) of dog's vicious propensities. Many plaintiffs couldn't prove prior knowledge = no recovery. AFTER Flanders (April 17, 2025, Court of Appeals): plaintiffs can now ALSO bring a NEGLIGENCE claim — owner failed to exercise reasonable care, no prior vicious history required. Flanders expressly overruled Bard v. Jahnke (which had barred negligence claims for domestic animal injuries). Massive plaintiff expansion.

Do I still need to prove the dog had prior vicious behavior?

Post-Flanders: NO — not for a negligence claim. You can pursue EITHER (or both): (1) Vicious propensity strict liability (pre-Flanders path) if you can prove prior knowledge, OR (2) NEGLIGENCE — owner failed to reasonable care (e.g., not restraining, not enclosing, leaving unattended with kids). Plead both; see which survives discovery. Prior knowledge evidence still strengthens your case, but is no longer required.

What is the New York dog bite SOL?

3 years from the bite date under CPLR §214. Tolled for minors until age 18. Longer than CA/IL/TX (2 years), shorter than FL (4 years). Do not delay — while longer than most states, documentation fades quickly (scars heal, witnesses move).

How does NY compare to other states for dog bite payouts?

NY has the HIGHEST average dog bite payouts nationally: $110,500 in 2024 (III data). Why: (1) no damage caps, (2) pure comparative negligence (no 50% bar), (3) NYC juries produce 25-30% higher verdicts than upstate, (4) dense urban environment = more severe child cases, (5) post-Flanders now allows negligence claims expanding viable cases. CA is second (2,830 claims in 2025, $86K avg) but has 2-year vs NY's 3-year SOL.

What are typical NY dog bite settlement values?

National average NY payout: $110,500 (2024 III). Moderate: $50K-$150K. Severe/disfiguring: $150K-$500K+. NYC verdicts: 25-30% higher than upstate — $200K-$1M+ for moderate facial scarring cases common. Post-Flanders (April 2025) expected to increase volumes + averages as more cases survive summary judgment under negligence path. Homeowner's insurance limits are practical cap — $100K-$300K typical.

Post-Flanders Unsettled Issues

Active legal developments (as of April 2026):

  • Post-Flanders (April 2025), interaction between vicious propensity strict liability and new negligence claim is still being worked out at trial court + Appellate Division level.
  • Full scope of 'negligence' sufficient to establish liability without prior vicious behavior is NOT yet settled.
  • NYC verdicts run 25-30% higher than upstate — geographic venue critical.
  • Landlord liability remains negligence-based (actual knowledge + ability to address).

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

Primary Sources

  • law.justia.com/cases/new-york/court-of-appeals/2025/29.html
  • www.wshblaw.com/experience-court-tightens-the-leash-on-defendants-allowing-negligence-claims-for-domestic-animal-injuries
  • www.dogbitelaw.com/blog/flanders-case-gives-ny-dog-bite-victims-justice
  • www.consumershield.com/articles/average-dog-bite-settlement-amounts

Other State Dog Bite Calculators

California

Pure strict liability §3342, no one-bite, 2,830 claims/$86K avg

Florida

Strict liability §767.04, 4-yr SOL (longest), Bad Dog sign defense

Illinois

Strict liability 510 ILCS 5/16 — covers attacks AND attempts

Texas

One-bite rule, negligence per se via leash law violation

Main Dog Bite Calculator

Nationwide dog bite overview

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Other Calculators for New York

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

New York Car Accident Settlement Calculator →New York Workers' Compensation Calculator →New York Slip & Fall Settlement Calculator →New York Dog Bite Settlement Calculator →New York Wrongful Death Calculator →New York Sexual Abuse Settlement Calculator →New York Construction Accident Calculator →

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