In Indiana, a written notice of claim must be filed against the at-fault state or local government entity within 180 days of the incident under Ind. Code § 34-13-3-6. The notice must be served on Political subdivision clerk + Attorney General. Failure to file within this short window bars the lawsuit even if the 2-year general personal-injury statute of limitations has not yet expired.
Government claim notice · Indiana
Indiana government claim notice: 180-day deadline.
When the at-fault party is a Indiana state or local government entity, you must file a written notice of
claim within 180 days under Ind. Code § 34-13-3-6. Missing this deadline bars the
lawsuit even if the 2-year general personal-injury SOL has not yet expired.
Verified 2026-05-16Informational only
Find your state's notice deadline
When the at-fault party is a state or local government entity, you must file a written notice of claim before suing. Find your deadline.
Deterministic
CALIFORNIA GOVERNMENT CLAIM NOTICE
180 daysfrom incident date
Statute
Cal. Gov. Code § 911.2
Notice recipient
Public entity (varies)
Days from incident
180
Notice requirements vary by entity type (state vs. county vs. city vs. school district). Consult an attorney for the specific filing officer in your case.
Why the Indiana notice-of-claim deadline matters
Sovereign immunity protects U.S. government entities from most tort lawsuits unless the government has
statutorily waived immunity for a specific category of claim. Indiana has waived immunity for certain
personal-injury claims through its Tort Claims Act, but the waiver comes with strict procedural prerequisites.
The most important of these is the written notice of claim, which must be served within 180 days of the
date of injury.
This deadline is jurisdictional. Missing it bars the lawsuit completely , not just because of procedural
defect, but because the underlying statutory waiver does not apply. Courts in Indiana have repeatedly
dismissed cases where the plaintiff missed the notice deadline by even a single day. The deadline is also much
shorter than the general 2-year personal-injury statute of limitations, which means cases involving
a potential government defendant must be evaluated and notice served within months of the injury, not years.
Common government-defendant cases include: collisions with city buses or police vehicles, slip-and-falls on
state or municipal property, injuries caused by public-school employees, claims against state hospital
physicians, and accidents on government-owned roads. Each of these triggers the notice-of-claim requirement
and the 180-day deadline.
Indiana notice-of-claim requirements
Statute: Ind. Code § 34-13-3-6.
Notice recipient: Political subdivision clerk + Attorney General.
Notes: Notice to the appropriate governmental entity within 180 days. The Indiana Tort Claims Act caps damages at $700,000 per claim.
The notice must typically include: the claimant's name and address, attorney information, date and place of
the incident, a description of the injury, a statement of damages claimed, and (in some states) a sworn
verification. State-specific forms vary; Indiana uses a written notice format consistent with the statute.
How to identify a government defendant
Not every defendant is a government entity, but some categories almost always are: state agencies, municipal
corporations, public school districts, transit authorities, public hospitals, state universities, public road
contractors (in their official capacity), and police or fire department personnel. Some entities are
ambiguous , government-funded contractors, public-private partnerships, and quasi-government corporations
require fact-specific analysis to determine whether they are within the sovereign-immunity umbrella.
The conservative approach is to treat any potentially-public defendant as a government defendant for notice
purposes and serve a precautionary notice within the 180-day window. The downside of an unnecessary
notice is zero; the downside of a missed notice is total bar.
The most common reason Indiana government tort claims fail
Late or insufficient notice. The notice must be served on the right official, contain the statutorily required
information, and be received within 180 days. Plaintiffs who serve notice on the wrong official, omit
required information, or file by mail after the deadline (postmark vs. receipt) routinely have their claims
dismissed. Consult an attorney immediately if you suspect a government defendant.
After the notice is filed: what happens next
Once notice is served, Indiana typically requires a waiting period before suit can be filed (often 60 to
120 days, depending on the entity). This waiting period allows the government to investigate and (in some
cases) settle the claim administratively. If the government denies the claim or fails to respond within the
statutory period, the plaintiff can then file suit.
Suit must be filed within the general 2-year personal-injury SOL, but the notice-of-claim
requirement does not extend this deadline. Plaintiffs sometimes miss the suit deadline while waiting for the
government's response to the notice; the government has no obligation to respond before the SOL runs.
Plaintiffs' counsel calendars both deadlines independently and files protectively before the SOL.
Damage caps that apply to Indiana government tort cases
Most state Tort Claims Acts cap damages on government-defendant cases. The caps vary substantially: Florida
caps damages at $200,000 per claim; California has no specific cap but procedurally limits recovery in
certain categories; Texas caps damages at $250,000 per person and $500,000 per occurrence depending on the
entity type. Indiana's cap framework is set by Ind. Code and related provisions.
The damage cap typically applies to economic and non-economic damages combined, though some states cap
non-economic damages separately. Punitive damages are generally not available against government defendants
regardless of the underlying conduct.
FAQ: Indiana government claim notice
How long do I have to file a government claim notice in Indiana?
180 days from the date of injury under Ind. Code § 34-13-3-6. The deadline is jurisdictional and is strictly enforced.
What if I miss the notice deadline?
The case is barred. Some states allow late notice in extraordinary circumstances (minor plaintiffs, mental incapacity), but the bar is high. Indiana courts rarely grant late-notice motions.
Who do I serve the notice on?
Political subdivision clerk + Attorney General. Some entities have specific designated claim officers; verify the correct recipient with the entity's legal department before serving.
Can I sue a Indiana government entity for any injury?
No. Sovereign immunity protects government entities except where the legislature has waived immunity. Indiana's Tort Claims Act lists specific waiver categories; claims outside those categories are barred regardless of notice.
Are damages capped in Indiana government tort cases?
Yes, typically. Indiana's Tort Claims Act imposes specific damage caps. Consult the statute and recent amendments for the current cap amounts.