Comparative negligence · Georgia

Georgia applies modified comparative fault (50% bar).

Georgia uses modified comparative fault: recovery is barred if plaintiff is 50% or more at fault. Authority: O.C.G.A. § 51-12-33.

Verified 2026-05-16 Informational only

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How Georgia jurors are instructed

The Georgia pattern jury instructions ask jurors to determine: (1) was the defendant negligent? (2) was the plaintiff negligent? (3) was each party\'s negligence a substantial factor in causing the injury? (4) what percentage of fault, totaling 100%, do you assign to each party?

The court applies the modified comparative fault (50% bar) formula to those percentages after the verdict form is returned.

How comparative negligence works in Georgia

Comparative negligence in Georgia is the single most important doctrine for predicting case value. Lawyers price cases based on liability strength, but the operative variable on the verdict form is the plaintiff's percentage of fault.

Georgia's 50% bar makes the line between 49% and 50% the most expensive percentage point in a Georgia courtroom. Defense lawyers fight to push the plaintiff to 50%; plaintiffs' counsel fight just as hard to keep them at 49% or below.

Worked dollar-impact examples

Pre-trial settlement valuation and trial strategy in Georgia both turn on these numbers. Below: five scenarios at common verdict sizes and fault percentages, with the recovery a Georgia plaintiff would actually receive under the state\'s modified comparative fault (50% bar) rule.

VerdictPlaintiff faultNet recoveryReduction
$100,000 10% $90,000 $10,000
$250,000 25% $187,500 $62,500
$500,000 49% $255,000 $245,000
$500,000 50% $0 $500,000
$1,000,000 60% $0 $1,000,000

Worked example: a Georgia jury awards a plaintiff $500,000 in damages and finds the plaintiff 10% at fault. Under the state's modified comparative fault (50% bar) rule, the plaintiff actually recovers $90,000.

Scenario: a slip-and-fall plaintiff is awarded $1,000,000 by a Georgia jury, with 25% of fault attributed to them for not watching where they walked. Under Georgia law (modified comparative fault (50% bar)), the final award is $187,500.

Scenario: a slip-and-fall plaintiff is awarded $1,000,000 by a Georgia jury, with 49% of fault attributed to them for not watching where they walked. Under Georgia law (modified comparative fault (50% bar)), the final award is $255,000.

Worked example: a Georgia jury awards a plaintiff $500,000 in damages and finds the plaintiff 50% at fault. Under the state's modified comparative fault (50% bar) rule, the plaintiff actually recovers $0.

Scenario: a slip-and-fall plaintiff is awarded $1,000,000 by a Georgia jury, with 60% of fault attributed to them for not watching where they walked. Under Georgia law (modified comparative fault (50% bar)), the final award is $0.

Why Georgia\'s rule matters at the settlement table

Georgia's rule changes how cases settle. In a state with a hard 50% bar, defense lawyers ramp up fault-allocation evidence , police reports, expert reconstruction, dashcam footage , because pushing the plaintiff over the threshold is worth the entire case. In pure-comparative states, both sides negotiate from a smoother slope.

In contested Georgia cases, the jury is the final arbiter of fault percentages. Pre-trial, lawyers run focus groups and mock juries to predict how an average Georgia juror will allocate responsibility on the specific facts , those predictions then drive settlement leverage.

Filing-deadline reminder

Georgia comparative-negligence rules only matter if you file on time. The state\'s personal-injury statute of limitations is 2 years from the date of injury (O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33). Even an airtight liability case is dismissed with prejudice if the complaint is filed late.

See Georgia SOL details

Common questions about Georgia comparative negligence

Does Georgia apply pure or modified comparative negligence?

Georgia applies modified comparative fault (50% bar). Georgia uses modified comparative fault: recovery is barred if plaintiff is 50% or more at fault.

What is the bar threshold in Georgia?

Georgia bars recovery when the plaintiff is 50% or more at fault.

How does the jury decide the percentages?

Georgia jurors are presented with a special verdict form asking them to assign fault percentages totaling 100% to each party (and any non-party at fault under joint-tortfeasor rules). The trial court then applies the comparative-fault formula to compute the final recovery.

Can multiple defendants be assigned fault?

Yes. Georgia juries can apportion fault among multiple defendants (and sometimes non-party tortfeasors). The treatment of joint and several liability , whether each defendant is liable only for their share or for the entire judgment if others are insolvent , varies by state statute.

Does seat-belt non-use count as plaintiff fault in Georgia?

Georgia courts vary on the "seat-belt defense." Some states allow evidence of non-use as a fault factor; others (by statute or judicial rule) exclude it. Plaintiffs\' counsel should consult current Georgia appellate decisions before deciding how to handle the issue at trial.

Does Georgia\'s rule apply to medical-malpractice cases?

Generally yes , Georgia\'s comparative-fault rule applies across negligence claims, including medical malpractice. Some states adjust the framework for medmal cases (e.g., reducing the plaintiff-fault relevance because patients rarely contribute to their own injuries in the traditional sense), but the basic rule applies unless the statute carves out an exception.

How does this rule affect settlement negotiations?

In modified comparative fault (50% bar) Georgia, the bar threshold becomes the focal point of settlement: defendants negotiate harder near the threshold, plaintiffs accept reduced offers to avoid the bar.

Related Georgia topics

Sources cited on this page

  1. Georgia comparative-negligence rule: O.C.G.A. § 51-12-33.
  2. Personal-injury filing deadline: O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33.
  3. Authority on jury instructions: Georgia pattern jury instructions and GA Sup. Ct., GA Ct. App. decisions.

Last verified against primary sources on 2026-05-16.