Traumatic brain injury (TBI) claims in Vermont: case value, filing deadline, settlement framework.
Vermont applies a 3-year filing deadline (Vt. Stat. tit. 12 § 512) and the modified comparative fault (51% bar) fault rule. Typical traumatic brain injury (tbi) settlement range: $50,000 to $5,000,000+ depending on severity, permanence, and life-care plan.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) cases in Vermont: the framework
A traumatic brain injury (tbi) claim in Vermont sits at the intersection of two bodies of law: the medical-evidence rules that govern traumatic brain injury (tbi) diagnosis and causation, and the Vermont-specific procedural rules that govern when the case can be filed, who can be sued, and how damages are calculated. Both bodies of law have to be navigated to convert the underlying injury into a recovery.
On the medical side, traumatic brain injury (tbi) (concussion, post-concussive syndrome, mild traumatic brain injury, mTBI) is typically treated through neurological evaluation, neuropsychological testing, cognitive rehabilitation. mild tbi may resolve in 3 to 12 months; moderate to severe tbi can produce permanent cognitive, emotional, and physical impairment. On the legal side, Vermont applies the modified comparative fault (51% bar) rule and a 3-year filing deadline. The combination of these two frameworks drives the case-value range and the procedural timeline for any specific case.
Vermont filing deadline for traumatic brain injury (tbi) cases
Under Vt. Stat. tit. 12 § 512, Vermont requires traumatic brain injury (tbi) cases to be filed within 3 years of the date of injury. The clock starts on the date the injury accrued, with limited exceptions for minors (tolled until age of majority), mental incapacity, and (in some circumstances) the discovery rule for injuries that could not reasonably have been discovered at the time.
For traumatic brain injury (tbi) specifically, the discovery rule can matter when symptoms develop or worsen after the initial incident. Serious injuries often produce symptoms immediately, but late-developing complications can extend the documented treatment timeline; the SOL clock starts on the incident date in nearly all cases.
For comparison, the medical-malpractice SOL in Vermont is 3 years and the wrongful-death SOL is 2 years from death. Each follows its own accrual rules.
Comparative-fault rule applied to traumatic brain injury (tbi) cases
Beating the SOL is necessary but not sufficient. A Vermont jury will also be asked to apportion fault , and the result determines how much of your damages you actually recover.
Vermont applies modified comparative fault (51% bar). Vermont uses modified comparative fault with a 51% bar: a plaintiff recovers as long as their negligence is not greater than the defendant's. At 50/50 fault, recovery is allowed (reduced by half); at 51% plaintiff fault, recovery is barred. For traumatic brain injury (tbi) cases, the comparative-fault analysis typically focuses on the moments leading up to the underlying incident: whether the plaintiff contributed to the conditions that produced the injury, whether seat-belt or other safety equipment was used, and (in slip-and-fall and similar cases) whether the plaintiff was reasonably attentive to the surroundings.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) medical evidence required in Vermont
Neurological evaluation, neuropsychological testing, cognitive rehabilitation. Mild TBI may resolve in 3 to 12 months; moderate to severe TBI can produce permanent cognitive, emotional, and physical impairment.
For Vermont courts, traumatic brain injury (tbi) cases require certain core categories of medical evidence: imaging or diagnostic testing tied to the incident date, a treating physician's causation opinion, treatment continuity records, and (for permanent-impairment cases) a functional-capacity evaluation. Each of these addresses a specific defense argument and supports a specific category of damages.
Red flags that reduce traumatic brain injury (tbi) case value in Vermont
Loss of consciousness is no longer required for diagnosis; defense will argue malingering or pre-existing condition; documentation of pre-injury baseline (school records, work performance) strengthens the case.
Evidence preservation in Vermont traumatic brain injury (tbi) cases
Building a winning Vermont case starts with documentation. The most successful plaintiffs are those who, within the first 72 hours, take photographs of every visible injury, save every emergency-room discharge document, write a contemporaneous narrative of the incident, and identify every potential witness. The Vermont rules of evidence reward contemporaneous documentation , a written note made the day of the incident carries far more weight at trial than a recollection three years later.
Settlement timeline for Vermont traumatic brain injury (tbi) cases
A typical Vermont personal-injury case settles in 9 to 18 months from the date of injury, but the timeline varies widely based on liability complexity, medical-treatment duration, and the carrier on the other side. Cases involving disputed liability or catastrophic injuries can run two to three years; clear-liability soft-tissue cases sometimes resolve in 6 to 9 months. The single biggest variable is when the plaintiff reaches "maximum medical improvement" (MMI) , until then, future damages cannot be reliably valued.
Expert testimony in Vermont traumatic brain injury (tbi) cases
In Vermont appellate practice, the most frequently challenged expert testimony involves causation: did the defendant's conduct cause the injury, or would the injury have occurred anyway? Defense experts routinely argue that the plaintiff's injury is degenerative or pre-existing; plaintiff's experts must build a counter-narrative anchored in objective imaging, comparative pre-injury baseline data, and the temporal proximity of symptoms to the incident date.
Claim process specific to Vermont
The standard Vermont claim process treats the at-fault carrier as the first source of recovery. If that policy is inadequate, secondary sources include the plaintiff's own UM/UIM coverage, any applicable umbrella policies, and (in third-party-defendant cases) the assets of co-defendants. Each tier requires separate notice, separate documentation, and separate negotiation strategy. Missing a notice deadline on any tier can extinguish that source of recovery entirely.
Mistakes that reduce Vermont traumatic brain injury (tbi) case value
Three avoidable errors recur in Vermont personal-injury cases: settling the property-damage claim without coordinating release language, missing the pre-suit notice deadline for any government-defendant component of the case, and undervaluing future-medical damages because the plaintiff did not get a life-care plan or a vocational expert. Each of these errors can transform a high-value case into a low-value one.
Insurance considerations for traumatic brain injury (tbi) cases in Vermont
Vermont requires minimum liability coverage of 25/50/10 (Vt. Stat. tit. 23 § 800). Vermont also requires UM coverage at 50/100.
For traumatic brain injury (tbi) cases involving substantial medical bills (which is common with moderate to severe injuries), the at-fault driver's liability policy is often exhausted before damages are fully covered. UM/UIM coverage on the injured party's own policy becomes the operative source of recovery, which is why verifying available coverage on every potential policy source is the first procedural task in any moderate-to-serious case.
Frequently asked questions: Traumatic brain injury (TBI) in Vermont
How long do I have to file a traumatic brain injury (tbi) lawsuit in Vermont?
3 years from the date of injury under Vt. Stat. tit. 12 § 512. Shorter notice deadlines apply for government defendants.
What is the typical settlement range for traumatic brain injury (tbi) in Vermont?
Typical range: $50,000 to $5,000,000+ depending on severity, permanence, and life-care plan. Vermont-specific values depend on the comparative-fault allocation, the strength of medical evidence, and the at-fault carrier's claim-handling pattern.
Will my comparative fault reduce my traumatic brain injury (tbi) recovery?
Vermont uses modified comparative fault with a 51% bar: a plaintiff recovers as long as their negligence is not greater than the defendant's. At 50/50 fault, recovery is allowed (reduced by half); at 51% plaintiff fault, recovery is barred. Your recovery is reduced proportionally to your fault percentage.
What medical evidence is needed for traumatic brain injury (tbi) in Vermont?
Neurological evaluation, neuropsychological testing, cognitive rehabilitation. Vermont courts also require a causation opinion from the treating physician and treatment continuity through maximum medical improvement.
Are there damage caps on traumatic brain injury (tbi) cases in Vermont?
Vermont does not impose general personal-injury damage caps.
Related Vermont resources
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) in nearby states
Other injury types in Vermont
Sources
- Vermont personal-injury statute: Vt. Stat. tit. 12 § 512.
- Comparative-fault rule: Vt. Stat. tit. 12 § 1036.
- Auto-insurance framework: Vt. Stat. tit. 23 § 800.
- Traumatic brain injury (TBI) medical classification: ICD-10 S06.
- Settlement data: CourtListener PACER archive + Insurance Information Institute claims aggregates.
Last verified on 2026-05-16.