Comparative Fault Rules by State: How Shared Negligence Affects Recovery
Accidents rarely involve a single party bearing rates that vary by region of the responsibility. Comparative fault — also called comparative negligence — is the legal doctrine that apportions damages among multiple parties based on each party's assigned share of fault. This page maps the three primary rule systems used across U.S. jurisdictions, explains how each system affects damage recovery, and provides a state-by-state reference matrix. Understanding these distinctions is foundational to tort law and directly shapes the value of any personal injury claim.
- Definition and scope
- Core mechanics or structure
- Causal relationships or drivers
- Classification boundaries
- Tradeoffs and tensions
- Common misconceptions
- Checklist or steps (non-advisory)
- Reference table or matrix
Definition and scope
Comparative fault is a tort doctrine that distributes liability for an injury across all parties — plaintiff and defendants — in proportion to each party's negligence. Rather than treating plaintiff fault as an absolute bar to recovery (the older common-law rule), comparative fault systems reduce or eliminate damages based on assigned fault percentages.
The doctrine operates within negligence law, which requires a plaintiff to prove duty, breach, causation, and damages. Comparative fault enters the analysis at the damages stage: once a finder of fact determines the total compensatory damages and assigns fault percentages, the award is adjusted accordingly.
Comparative fault rules are entirely creatures of state law. No single federal statute governs comparative negligence in personal injury cases between private parties (the Federal Tort Claims Act applies its own fault rules to claims against the federal government). As of the publication of the Restatement (Third) of Torts: Apportionment of Liability (American Law Institute, 2000), most states had abandoned pure contributory negligence in favor of some comparative fault system.
Scope of application spans motor vehicle collisions, premises liability, product liability, medical malpractice, and most other personal injury contexts. Some states carve out specific rules for particular tort categories — workers' compensation systems, for instance, operate under separate apportionment schemes addressed in workers' compensation law.
Core mechanics or structure
Step 1 — Total damages calculation. The jury (or judge in a bench trial) first determines the plaintiff's total compensable harm in dollars, treating fault as irrelevant at this stage. This figure covers economic losses (medical expenses, lost wages) and non-economic losses (pain and suffering) as recognized under compensatory damages doctrine.
Step 2 — Fault percentage assignment. The finder of fact assigns a fault percentage to each party — plaintiff and each defendant — that must sum to rates that vary by region. In multi-defendant cases, most states require the jury to allocate among all named parties and, in some jurisdictions, among non-parties whose fault was raised by a defendant.
Step 3 — Threshold evaluation. In modified comparative fault states, the court checks whether the plaintiff's assigned percentage crosses the jurisdiction's statutory bar (rates that vary by region or rates that vary by region, depending on the state). If it does, recovery is barred entirely.
Step 4 — Damage reduction. The plaintiff's recoverable damages equal total damages multiplied by (1 − plaintiff's fault percentage), provided the threshold is not crossed.
Step 5 — Joint-and-several liability determination. Separately, the court applies the jurisdiction's joint-and-several liability rules to determine which defendants are liable for the full reduced award versus only their proportionate share. This step is independent of the comparative fault calculation itself, though many state tort reform statutes link the two.
Causal relationships or drivers
The shift from contributory negligence to comparative fault was driven primarily by judicial dissatisfaction with the harsh all-or-nothing outcome of contributory negligence. The California Supreme Court's 1975 decision in Li v. Yellow Cab Co. (13 Cal.3d 804) is widely cited as the judicial watershed moment, replacing contributory negligence with pure comparative fault through common-law development rather than legislation.
Legislative tort reform waves of the 1980s and 1990s accelerated adoption of modified comparative fault systems in states that were concerned that pure comparative fault allowed even predominantly negligent plaintiffs to recover. Organizations such as the American Law Institute tracked this evolution in the Restatement (Third) of Torts, noting the trend toward rates that vary by region threshold rules in legislative adoptions.
Insurance industry data submitted to state legislatures during reform debates consistently showed that pure comparative fault systems produced higher average damage awards than modified systems — a driver cited in legislative histories of states adopting the rates that vary by region bar. The precise award differentials vary by state and study, and no single authoritative national figure has been established.
Classification boundaries
The three principal systems divide as follows:
Pure comparative fault. The plaintiff recovers a reduced share of damages regardless of fault percentage. A plaintiff found rates that vary by region at fault for a collision still recovers rates that vary by region of total damages. Thirteen states follow this rule, including California (Cal. Civil Code § 1714), New York, Florida (as modified by HB 837 in 2023, which shifted Florida from pure to modified comparative fault for most cases), and Louisiana.
Modified comparative fault — rates that vary by region bar. The plaintiff is barred from any recovery if assigned rates that vary by region or more of the fault. At exactly rates that vary by region, the plaintiff recovers nothing. some states use this threshold, including Arkansas, Colorado, Georgia, Idaho, Kansas, Maine, Nebraska, North Dakota, Tennessee, Utah, West Virginia, and Wisconsin (Uniform Comparative Fault Act, adopted in variant forms by these states).
Modified comparative fault — rates that vary by region bar. The plaintiff is barred only if assigned more than rates that vary by region of fault — meaning a plaintiff found exactly rates that vary by region at fault still recovers rates that vary by region of damages. This is the most common variant; approximately many states use the rates that vary by region threshold, including Texas (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 33.001), Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey.
Pure contributory negligence. Four jurisdictions — Alabama, Maryland, North Carolina, Virginia, and the District of Columbia — retain the common-law rule that any plaintiff negligence, even rates that vary by region, completely bars recovery. This is the most plaintiff-restrictive system and is addressed in detail at contributory negligence states.
Tradeoffs and tensions
Plaintiff recovery vs. deterrence. Pure comparative fault maximizes plaintiff recovery but critics argue it reduces deterrence for careless plaintiffs. Modified systems introduce a bright-line cutoff that can produce inequitable results near the threshold — a plaintiff at rates that vary by region fault recovers substantially, while one at rates that vary by region recovers nothing.
Jury anchoring. Fault percentages are not mechanical outputs; juries anchor them based on narrative framing. Empirical research published in the Journal of Empirical Legal Studies has found that small changes in how fault is presented can shift percentage assignments by 10 or more percentage points, making the threshold distinctions highly sensitive to advocacy rather than objective measurement.
Joint-and-several liability interaction. In states that have abolished or limited joint-and-several liability alongside comparative fault reform (as Texas did in Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 33.013), a plaintiff injured by multiple defendants may be unable to collect the full reduced award if one defendant is judgment-proof. This creates a practical gap between legal entitlement and actual recovery.
Non-party fault allocation. Several states permit defendants to reduce their liability by attributing fault to non-parties — including immune employers or settling parties. The burden of proof for establishing non-party fault typically falls on the defendant, but the practice can sharply reduce recoveries against remaining defendants.
Common misconceptions
Misconception: Comparative fault and contributory negligence are the same doctrine. They are distinct. Contributory negligence bars recovery entirely upon any plaintiff fault. Comparative fault reduces recovery proportionally. The practical consequence is enormous — a plaintiff who is rates that vary by region at fault recovers nothing under contributory negligence but recovers rates that vary by region of damages under comparative fault.
Misconception: The plaintiff's fault percentage is determined objectively. Fault percentages are jury findings of fact, subject to the same cognitive biases as any factual determination. They are reviewed on appeal under a deferential standard and are rarely overturned absent clear evidence of irrationality.
Misconception: A defendant's liability is capped at their fault percentage. This is true only in states that have abolished joint-and-several liability. In pure joint-and-several states, a defendant found rates that vary by region at fault may still be required to pay rates that vary by region of a reduced judgment if co-defendants cannot pay.
Misconception: Comparative fault applies only to two-party disputes. Multi-party apportionment is common in product liability, premises liability, and multi-vehicle collision cases. The Restatement (Third) of Torts: Apportionment of Liability provides model rules for allocating fault among three or more parties, including settling defendants and immune parties.
Misconception: Florida still uses pure comparative fault. Florida's HB 837, signed into law in March 2023, converted Florida to a modified comparative fault system with a rates that vary by region bar for most tort claims, ending the state's decades-long status as a pure comparative fault jurisdiction. This is one of the most significant recent state-level shifts in U.S. comparative fault law.
Checklist or steps (non-advisory)
The following sequence reflects the analytical framework applied in comparative fault cases, as described in the Restatement (Third) of Torts: Apportionment of Liability:
- [ ] Identify governing state law. Determine which state's substantive tort law applies (relevant when venue and forum selection is contested or removal to federal court is at issue).
- [ ] Confirm the applicable fault system. Establish whether the jurisdiction uses pure comparative fault, modified comparative fault (rates that vary by region bar), modified comparative fault (rates that vary by region bar), or contributory negligence.
- [ ] Identify all potentially fault-bearing parties. Include plaintiff, all named defendants, non-parties whose fault may be raised under state statute, and settling parties.
- [ ] Determine total compensatory damages. Separate economic damages (calculable) from non-economic damages (jury-determined); note any statutory caps under state law.
- [ ] Apply the threshold test. If modified comparative fault applies, evaluate whether plaintiff's potential fault percentage crosses the statutory bar.
- [ ] Apply joint-and-several liability rules. Determine which defendants bear liability for the full reduced award versus only their proportionate share under the jurisdiction's post-reform rules.
- [ ] Account for pre-trial settlements. In states with pro tanto or proportionate reduction rules, determine how prior settlements affect remaining defendants' liability (see settlement vs. trial for procedural context).
- [ ] Review for special tort categories. Confirm whether the specific claim type (medical malpractice, product liability) carries modified apportionment rules under state statute.
Reference table or matrix
Comparative Fault System by State
| State | System | Bar Threshold | Key Statute or Authority |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alabama | Contributory Negligence | Any fault bars recovery | Common law |
| Alaska | Pure Comparative Fault | No bar | Alaska Stat. § 09.17.060 |
| Arizona | Pure Comparative Fault | No bar | Ariz. Rev. Stat. § 12-2505 |
| Arkansas | Modified — rates that vary by region Bar | ≥rates that vary by region bars recovery | Ark. Code Ann. § 16-64-122 |
| California | Pure Comparative Fault | No bar | Li v. Yellow Cab Co., 13 Cal.3d 804 (1975) |
| Colorado | Modified — rates that vary by region Bar | ≥rates that vary by region bars recovery | Colo. Rev. Stat. § 13-21-111 |
| Connecticut | Modified — rates that vary by region Bar | >rates that vary by region bars recovery | Conn. Gen. Stat. § 52-572h |
| Florida | Modified — rates that vary by region Bar | >rates that vary by region bars recovery | HB 837 (2023); Fla. Stat. § 768.81 |
| Georgia | Modified — rates that vary by region Bar | ≥rates that vary by region bars recovery | Ga. Code Ann. § 51-11-7 |
| Idaho | Modified — rates that vary by region Bar | ≥rates that vary by region bars recovery | Idaho Code § 6-801 |
| Illinois | Modified — rates that vary by region Bar | >rates that vary by region bars recovery | 735 ILCS 5/2-1116 |
| Indiana | Modified — rates that vary by region Bar | >rates that vary by region bars recovery | Ind. Code § 34-51-2-6 |
| Iowa | Modified — rates that vary by region Bar | >rates that vary by region bars recovery | Iowa Code § 668.3 |
| Kansas | Modified — rates that vary by region Bar | ≥rates that vary by region bars recovery | Kan. Stat. Ann. § 60-258a |
| Kentucky | Pure Comparative Fault | No bar | Hilen v. Hays, 673 S.W.2d 713 (Ky. 1984) |
| Louisiana | Pure Comparative Fault | No bar | La. Civ. Code art. 2323 |
| Maine | Modified — rates that vary by region Bar | ≥rates that vary by region bars recovery | Me. Rev. Stat. tit. 14 § 156 |
| Maryland | Contributory Negligence | Any fault bars recovery | Common law |
| Massachusetts | Modified — rates that vary by region Bar | >rates that vary by region bars recovery | Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 231 § 85 |
| Michigan | Modified — rates that vary by region Bar | >rates that vary by region bars recovery | Mich. Comp. Laws § 600.2959 |
| Minnesota | Modified — rates that vary by region Bar | >rates that vary by region bars recovery | Minn. Stat. § 604.01 |
| Mississippi | Pure Comparative Fault | No bar | Miss. Code Ann. § 11-7-15 |
| Missouri | Pure Comparative Fault | No bar | Mo. Rev. Stat. § 537.765 |
| Montana | Modified — rates that vary by region Bar | >rates that vary by region bars recovery | Mont. Code Ann. § 27-1-702 |
| Nebraska | Modified — rates that vary by region Bar | ≥rates that vary by region bars recovery | Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-21,185.09 |
| Nevada | Modified — rates that vary by region Bar | >rates that vary by region bars recovery | Nev. Rev. Stat. § 41.141 |
| New Hampshire | Modified — rates that vary by region Bar | >rates that vary by region bars recovery | N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 507:7-d |
| New Jersey | Modified — rates that vary by region Bar | >rates that vary by region bars recovery | N.J. Stat. Ann. § 2A:15-5.1 |
| New Mexico | Pure Comparative Fault | No bar | Scott v. Rizzo, 96 N.M. 682 (1981) |
| New York | Pure Comparative Fault | No bar | N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 1411 |
| North Carolina | Contributory Negligence | Any fault bars recovery | Common law |
| North Dakota | Modified — rates that vary by region Bar | ≥rates that vary by region bars recovery | N.D. Cent. Code § 32-03.2-02 |
| Ohio | Modified — rates that vary by region Bar | >rates that vary by region bars recovery | Ohio Rev. Code § 2315.33 |
| Oklahoma | Modified — rates that vary by region Bar | >rates that vary by region bars recovery | Okla. Stat. tit. 23 § 13 |
| Oregon | Modified — rates that vary by region Bar | >rates that vary by region bars recovery | Or. Rev. Stat. § 31.600 |
| Pennsylvania | Modified — rates that vary by region Bar | >rates that vary by region bars recovery | 42 Pa. Cons. Stat. § 7102 |
| Rhode Island | Pure Comparative Fault | No bar | R.I. Gen. Laws § 9-20-4 |
| South Carolina | Modified — rates that vary by region Bar | >rates that vary by region bars recovery | S.C. Code Ann. § 15-38-15 |
| South Dakota | Modified — rates that vary by region Bar | >rates that vary by region bars recovery | S.D. Codified Laws § 20-9-2 |
| Tennessee | Modified — rates that vary by region Bar | ≥rates that vary by region bars recovery | Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-11-103 |
| Texas |
References
- National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) — nahb.org
- U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Outlook Handbook — bls.gov/ooh
- International Code Council (ICC) — iccsafe.org