Compensatory Damages in Texas Personal Injury Cases

Person sitting on the road holding injured leg beside damaged vehicle after a car crash.

Compensatory damages in Texas are monetary awards that restore what an injured person lost due to someone else’s negligence. They fall into two categories: economic damages (medical bills, lost wages, property damage) and non-economic damages (pain and suffering, emotional distress, loss of enjoyment of life). Standard personal injury cases have no cap on either category.

The distinction between these two categories affects how your damages are documented, calculated, and disputed by insurers. Compensatory damages in Texas are governed by Chapter 41 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code.

Man signing damages claim form with a lawyer.

Economic Damages in Texas Personal Injury Cases: What Counts and How It’s Calculated

Economic damages, also called special damages, are the quantifiable financial losses you suffered as a direct result of the injury. Texas does not cap economic damages in standard personal injury cases, meaning a jury can award the full documented amount.

Texas personal injury cases, including those filed by Waco injury victims and across the state, follow the same statewide rules under Chapter 41 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code.

The following losses qualify as economic damages, along with the proof typically required for each:

  • Medical expenses (past): all treatment costs from the date of injury through the date of trial. Proof: medical bills, treatment records, and itemized statements from providers.
  • Medical expenses (future): projected costs for ongoing care, surgery, rehabilitation, or medication. Proof: expert medical testimony establishing the necessity and cost of future treatment.
  • Lost wages: income you could not earn during recovery. Proof: pay stubs, employer records, and tax returns covering the period of absence.
  • Loss of future earning capacity: reduced ability to earn income due to permanent injury. Proof: vocational expert testimony and economic expert analysis.
  • Property damage: repair or replacement cost of your vehicle or other damaged property. Proof: repair estimates and replacement receipts.
  • Out-of-pocket costs: transportation to medical appointments, home modifications, hired help for tasks you can no longer perform. Proof: receipts and documented expenses.

A personal injury lawyer builds the evidentiary record for each category, which directly affects the total economic damages figure presented to the insurer or jury.

Non-Economic Damages in Texas: Pain, Suffering, and What You Can Actually Recover

Non-economic damages, also known as general damages, compensate for losses that have no fixed monetary value. Under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Section 41.001(12), they include: physical pain and suffering, mental anguish, loss of consortium, disfigurement, physical impairment, loss of companionship, inconvenience, and loss of enjoyment of life.

Texas does not cap non-economic damages in standard personal injury cases. The exception is medical malpractice, where non-economic damages are capped at $250,000 per provider, with a total cap of $750,000.

Because no bill or receipt captures these losses, two recognized methods are used to calculate them:

  • Multiplier method: multiply the total economic damages by a factor between 1.5 and 5, depending on injury severity. Permanent disability, traumatic brain injury, and severe scarring typically produce multipliers at the higher end. A $50,000 economic damages total with a multiplier of 3 yields $150,000 in non-economic damages.
  • Per diem method: assign a daily dollar value to the pain and suffering, then multiply by the number of days of recovery. A rate of $200 per day over 365 days produces $73,000.

Pain and suffering damages in Texas are among the most disputed categories in any personal injury claim, because insurers challenge both the method and the amount. A clear grasp of how pain and suffering is calculated in Texas before entering negotiations puts you in a stronger position.

How Texas Law Limits Compensatory Damages: Caps, Exceptions, and the 51% Rule

Texas does not cap compensatory damages in most personal injury cases, but two rules directly affect how much you can recover: exceptions for certain case types and the state’s comparative fault rule.

Damage caps by case type:

  • Standard personal injury: no cap on economic or non-economic compensatory damages.
  • Medical malpractice: non-economic damages capped at $250,000 per provider, with a total cap of $750,000 regardless of how many providers are involved.
  • Government entity claims: separate cap rules apply under the Texas Tort Claims Act. Recovery limits vary depending on the type of claim and the entity involved.
  • Punitive (exemplary) damages: capped at the greater of $200,000 or two times economic damages plus up to $750,000 in non-economic damages. Punitive damages in Texas follow a separate evidentiary standard and require a finding of fraud, malice, or gross negligence.

The 51% comparative fault rule

Under Chapter 33 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code, Texas follows a modified comparative negligence standard. If you are found 51% or more at fault for the accident, you recover nothing. If your fault is 50% or less, your damages are reduced by your percentage of fault.

A concrete example: a jury awards $100,000 but finds you 30% at fault. You recover $70,000. At 31% fault, you still recover $69,000. At 51%, you receive nothing.

Insurers use this rule aggressively. Any evidence of shared fault, a delay in seeking treatment, or a prior injury in the same area becomes a tool to push your percentage up and your recovery down.

Person inspecting vehicle damage while insurance claim form is completed beside a damaged car

What You Need to Prove Compensatory Damages in a Texas Personal Injury Case

To recover compensatory damages in Texas, you must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that another party’s negligence caused your injury and that you suffered documented losses as a result.

That standard, more likely than not, requires establishing four elements: a duty of care existed, that duty was breached, the breach caused your injury, and the injury produced quantifiable damages. Each element must be supported by evidence, not just asserted.

Proof requirements vary by damage type:

  • Medical expenses: past bills and treatment records; future care requires expert medical testimony on necessity and projected cost.
  • Lost wages: pay stubs, employer records, and tax returns covering the missed period.
  • Loss of earning capacity: vocational expert and economic expert testimony projecting long-term income impact.
  • Pain and suffering: medical records documenting the injury and treatment, personal journals, and testimony from treating physicians and family members.
  • Property damage: repair estimates and replacement receipts.

The types of damages in a personal injury case that apply to your claim determine which records you need to gather from day one.

One deadline governs all of this: under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Section 16.003, you have two years from the date of injury to file a lawsuit. Missing that deadline forfeits your right to any compensation, regardless of how strong the evidence is.

Compensatory Damages vs. Punitive Damages in Texas: Key Differences

Compensatory damages and punitive damages serve different purposes under Texas law and require different standards of proof.

Compensatory damages restore what the injured person lost. Punitive damages, called exemplary damages in Texas, exist to punish the defendant for conduct that goes beyond ordinary negligence. The distinction matters because they are proven, awarded, and capped differently.

Standard of proof:

  • Compensatory damages: preponderance of the evidence, meaning more likely than not.
  • Punitive damages: clear and convincing evidence of fraud, malice, or gross negligence. That is a higher bar, and most cases do not meet it.

Conduct that may support punitive damages:

  • A drunk driver who kills someone
    A trucking company that ignored federal hours-of-service regulations
    A property owner who concealed a known hazard from visitors

How the trial process works

Texas uses a bifurcated trial structure for punitive damages. The jury first decides liability and compensatory damages. Only if liability is established does the case proceed to a second phase where punitive damages are considered. A unanimous jury verdict is required to award them.

Punitive damages are capped at the greater of $200,000 or two times economic damages plus up to $750,000 in non-economic damages. Compensatory damages in standard personal injury cases carry no cap.

Patient signing medical paperwork with healthcare professional holding clipboard in a clinical setting.

Get a Free Case Review From a Texas Personal Injury Lawyer

Thompson Law offers a Free Consultation with No Fee Unless We Win, backed by over $1.9 billion recovered for injury victims across Texas. Our team evaluates your damages, builds the evidentiary record, and negotiates or litigates to recover what the law allows. Contact us to review your case.

Frequently Asked Questions About Compensatory Damages in Texas

What qualifies as compensatory damages in a Texas personal injury case?

Compensatory damages include any financial or personal loss caused by another party’s negligence. Economic damages cover medical bills, lost wages, property damage, and out-of-pocket costs. Non-economic damages cover pain and suffering, mental anguish, disfigurement, and loss of enjoyment of life.

How are non-economic damages calculated in Texas?

Two methods are used. The multiplier method multiplies total economic damages by a factor of 1.5 to 5 based on injury severity. The per diem method assigns a daily dollar value to the suffering and multiplies it by the number of recovery days. Permanent injuries and traumatic brain injuries typically yield higher results under either method.

Is there a cap on compensatory damages in Texas?

Standard personal injury cases have no cap on economic or non-economic compensatory damages. Exceptions apply in medical malpractice cases, where non-economic damages are capped at $250,000 per provider and $750,000 total, and in claims against government entities.

What evidence do I need to prove my damages after an accident in Texas?

Medical bills and treatment records establish past medical expenses. Expert testimony covers future care and lost earning capacity. Pay stubs and employer records support lost wage claims. Personal journals, medical records, and witness testimony support pain and suffering. You have two years from the date of injury under Section 16.003 to file.

How does comparative fault affect my compensatory damages in Texas?

Under Chapter 33, your damages are reduced by your percentage of fault. At 30% fault on a $100,000 award, you recover $70,000. At 51% or more fault, you recover nothing. Insurers use this rule to argue shared fault and reduce their payout.

What is the difference between compensatory and punitive damages in Texas?

Compensatory damages restore your losses. Punitive damages punish the defendant for fraud, malice, or gross negligence, and require clear and convincing evidence, a higher standard than compensatory damages. They go through a separate phase of trial and are capped under Texas law.

¿Ofrecen servicios en español para casos de lesiones personales en Waco y otras ciudades de Texas?

Sí. Nuestro equipo atiende casos de lesiones personales en español en Waco, Dallas, Houston y otras ciudades de Texas. Si tienes dudas sobre los daños compensatorios que podrías reclamar, contáctanos para revisar tu caso. La consulta es gratis y no cobramos a menos que ganemos.

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