Virginia Medical Malpractice Settlement Calculator
Estimate Virginia medical malpractice settlement — $2.7M TOTAL cap (econ+non-econ combined) + Pure Contributory bar. Real Virginia statutes, landmark verdicts, attorney fee structure.
Last reviewed: April 2026
VA: $2.70M TOTAL CAP (Va. Code §8.01-581.15) — applies to ALL damages (economic + non-economic combined). Increases $50K/year to $3.00M cap by 2031. PURE CONTRIBUTORY NEGLIGENCE — any fault = $0. 2-year SOL + 10-year repose.
Your Injury
Your Estimated Settlement
$36,000 — $66,000
How Your Estimate Compares
Based on 529,804 medical malpractice payments reported to the National Practitioner Data Bank (2000–2025):
Based on 459,526 real payments, similar cases in CA settle between $14K – $55K.
Average
$141K
Median
$28K
Cases
53,535
Source: NPDB analysis. Malpractice cases only. Payments are range-coded; midpoints used for calculations.
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
Virginia Medical Malpractice — Key Framework
Virginia caps TOTAL recoverable damages at $2.70M for acts July 1, 2025 – June 30, 2026 (Va. Code §8.01-581.15) — uniquely capping economic + non-economic combined, not just non-economic. Cap increases $50K annually to maximum $3.00M for acts from July 1, 2031 onward. 2026 HB536 bid to raise cap to $6M failed; final bill retained existing schedule.
VA is one of only 4 states with PURE CONTRIBUTORY NEGLIGENCE — any plaintiff fault percentage bars recovery entirely. Combined with the total cap, this makes VA one of the most defendant-friendly med-mal jurisdictions. SOL: 2 years from injury or discovery (Va. Code §8.01-243), 10-year statute of repose.
Pre-suit certification required (Va. Code §8.01-20.1) — plaintiff must certify at service that a qualified expert reviewed the case and confirmed (1) standard-of-care deviation and (2) proximate causation. Certification can be delayed up to 6 months for good cause. Failure = dismissal without prejudice.
Key VA Med-Mal Statutes
Virginia med-mal framework key provisions:
Va. Code §8.01-581.15
TOTAL Damages Cap (combined)Standard: $2.70M (2025-26); +$50K/year to $3.00M cap by 2031
Va. Code §8.01-243
Med-Mal SOLStandard: 2 years from injury/discovery; 10-year repose
Va. Code §8.01-20.1
Pre-Suit Expert CertificationStandard: Required at service of process; 6-month delay possible
Common Law (Va. Code §8.01-58)
Pure Contributory NegligenceStandard: Any plaintiff fault = complete bar to recovery
Recovery Structure
Economic damages: medical bills, lost wages, future care. Non-economic: pain & suffering, loss of consortium. Punitive: rare in med-mal, requires gross negligence or intentional harm. State-specific caps and exceptions apply — see Damage Caps section.
Expert Requirements + Attorney Fees
Expert testimony required: standard of care + deviation + causation must be established by qualified expert. Pre-suit affidavit/certification: see Statutes section for state-specific requirements. Attorney fees: typically 33-40% contingency, no recovery = no fee.
Damage Caps
$2.70M TOTAL cap on all damages combined (economic + non-economic + punitive) for acts July 1, 2025 – June 30, 2026. Cap is INCIDENT-DATE based, not verdict-date. Schedule increases $50K/year: $2.75M (2026-27), $2.80M (2027-28), ... $3.00M (2031+). Note: the total-cap structure is unique — most states cap only non-economic. In VA, even high-economic-damage cases (lifetime care for catastrophic injury) are limited to total cap.
VA Med-Mal Verdicts + Averages
Virginia verdicts and average payouts reflect state-specific framework:
| Amount | Year | Case / Injury |
|---|---|---|
| $5M | 2024 | Undisclosed v. Hospital (Chesterfield Co.) — Airway mismanagement / esophageal intubation / wrongful death |
| $2.5M | 2023 | Undisclosed v. Anesthesiologist — Obstetrics / failure to provide timely C-section anesthesia |
| $975K | 2019 | Undisclosed v. OB/GYN (Arlington) — Birth injury / brachial plexus injury |
| $412K | — |
Virginia Medical Malpractice FAQs
What is the Virginia medical malpractice damage cap?
$2.70M TOTAL on all damages combined (economic + non-economic + punitive) for acts July 1, 2025 – June 30, 2026 (Va. Code §8.01-581.15). Unique among US states: this is a TOTAL cap, not just non-economic. Cap increases $50K/year to maximum $3.00M for acts from July 1, 2031 onward. Cap applies based on incident date, not verdict date.
How does pure contributory negligence affect VA med-mal cases?
Devastatingly. Virginia is one of 4 US states with pure contributory negligence — if a jury finds you even 1% at fault, you recover $0. Defense will allege any plaintiff fault aggressively (e.g., delayed seeking treatment, didn't follow instructions). This is the single biggest barrier to VA med-mal recovery, on top of the total cap.
What is the VA medical malpractice statute of limitations?
2 years from injury or discovery under Va. Code §8.01-243. Statute of repose: 10 years absolute. Continuing Treatment Rule may toll SOL during uninterrupted treatment for same condition (substantially narrowed by Cothran v. Jauregui, 2025). Foreign object exception: +1 year. Cancer/spinal misdiagnosis: +1 year.
What did 2026 HB536 attempt to change?
HB536 originally proposed raising the cap to $6M by 2027 and reforming the schedule. The Senate substantially amended it; the final enacted version (signed 2026) retained the existing cap schedule and added data-disclosure requirements (insurers/hospitals must report premium and claim data to the General Assembly). The cap was NOT raised to $6M.
Why is the VA cap considered restrictive even at $2.70M?
Because it's a TOTAL cap on all damages combined. In a catastrophic birth injury case requiring 70+ years of lifetime care, economic damages alone (medical care, lost earnings, equipment) easily exceed $5-10M. The VA cap limits the entire recovery to $2.70M — leaving plaintiff family liable for the gap. Many plaintiff attorneys decline VA cases below a certain damage threshold because the cap destroys economic viability.
Pending VA Med-Mal Issues
Active legal developments (as of April 2026):
- Total-cap structure (econ + non-econ combined) is unique to VA — economic damages are NOT separately recoverable above cap.
- Cothran v. Jauregui (VA Supreme Court 2025) substantially narrowed the Continuing Treatment Rule — passive monitoring instructions terminate tolling.
- HB536 2026 reform attempt failed — cap remains on $50K/year schedule. Track future legislative sessions for further amendment attempts.
- Pure contributory negligence bar combined with total cap make VA one of the most defendant-favorable med-mal states in the US.
Informational only — consult a licensed attorney for case-specific advice.
Primary Sources
- law.lis.virginia.gov/vacode/title8.01/chapter21.1/section8.01-581.15
- law.lis.virginia.gov/vacode/title8.01/chapter4/section8.01-243
- www.vpm.org/generalassembly/2026-03-20/medical-malpractice-bill-damages-cap-obenshain-hope-walker-vhha
- wallacewason.com/virginia-medical-malpractice-cap-will-increase-in-july-2026
Other State Medical Malpractice Calculators
New York
NO caps, 2.5-yr SOL, Lavern's Law cancer exception, $595M 2024 (highest US)
California
MICRA 2026: $470K/$650K caps phasing to $750K/$1M by 2033
Florida
NO caps post-Estate of McCall 2014, §766.106 pre-suit + expert affidavit
Texas
$250K/$750K hard caps never inflation-adjusted, §74.351 expert report fatal
Illinois
NO caps post-Lebron 2010, §5/2-622 expert affidavit at filing, Cook County
Pennsylvania
NO caps (constitutional bar Art. III §18), MCARE Act, 2-yr SOL
Ohio
$250K/$500K caps (R.C. §2323.43), 1-yr SOL, affidavit of merit
New Jersey
NO general cap, $350K punitive cap, Affidavit of Merit Statute
Michigan
$521K/$929K caps (MCL §600.1483), 6-mo notice + 182-day pre-suit
Washington
NO caps (Sofie 1989), 3-yr SOL, certificate of merit RCW §7.70.150
Georgia
NO non-economic cap (Nestlehutt 2010), $250K punitive cap, 2-yr SOL + 5-yr repose, OCGA §9-11-9.1 affidavit required
North Carolina
$712,847 cap (CPI-indexed), PURE CONTRIBUTORY (any fault = $0), 3-yr SOL + 4-yr repose, Rule 9(j) certification
Arizona
NO cap (Constitution Art. 2 §31), 2-yr SOL no repose, pure comparative negligence, Banner $31.5M 2024
Massachusetts
$500K cap (NOT inflation-indexed, jury-lifted exceptions), Tribunal §60B, 3-yr SOL + 7-yr repose, modified comparative 51%
Colorado
$530K cap (2026, rising to $875K by 2029 under HB24-1472), Banner Health v. Gresser 2025 = $39.8M cap-exceedance, 2-yr SOL + 3-yr repose, modified comparative 50%
Maryland
$920K cap (2026, +$15K/yr fixed from 2009 $650K base), MANDATORY HCADRO pre-suit arbitration, 3-yr SOL or 5-yr repose (earlier of), Certificate of Qualified Expert §3-2A-04(b)
Missouri
Dual cap $481K non-cat / $842K cat (2026, +1.7%/yr). Original cap struck Watts 2012, reinstated 2015 as statutory cause. 2-yr STRICT occurrence (no discovery rule). Pure comparative fault.
Minnesota
NO cap. SOL just cut 4→2 years (Aug 2025, SF3489). Mandatory 2-affidavit expert system §145.682. Modified comparative 50%. Thapa $111M (2022) largest MN history, reduced to $11.25M.
Indiana
$1.8M TOTAL cap (provider $500K + PCF $1.3M). PURE CONTRIBUTORY for qualified providers (any fault = $0). Mandatory 3-doctor review panel pre-suit. 2-yr strict occurrence (no discovery rule).
Main Medical Malpractice Calculator
Nationwide med-mal overview
Other Calculators for Virginia
Each Virginia calculator reflects state-specific laws (caps, statutes of limitations, comparative-negligence rules) and uses Virginia verdict data where available.