What Types of Damages Can You Sue for in a Personal Injury Case in Texas?

Texas Damages TL;DR: 5-minute checklist, caps, and next steps

You wanted the 5-minute Texas damages TL;DR—here it is. In one scroll, see the three buckets, the caps that matter, and what to do today. Next, we’ll define damages under Texas law.

  • Economic (money you’ve paid or will pay): medical bills, lost wages, property repair or value, rentals, mileage, childcare, devices. Past and future amounts.
  • Non-economic (the human impact): pain and suffering, mental anguish, loss of enjoyment, physical impairment, disfigurement, loss of consortium. Your story and corroboration drive value.
  • Exemplary (punitive): rare in Texas; meant to punish and deter gross negligence, malice, or fraud. Higher proof standard and statutory caps apply.
  • Texas levers that change value: 51% fault bar, paid/incurred medical limits, medical malpractice caps, punitive cap formula, notice deadlines, and a typical two-year limit.
  • Proof drives payout: records, receipts, and 18.001 affidavits (sworn billing proof), plus credible experts and day-to-day story. Gaps and social media can sink value.
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What “damages” really means: the legal name for your losses in Texas

You just saw how we map damages fast—so what are “damages” exactly? In Texas, damages are the losses the law recognizes and pays for. Example: a Memorial dad leaves the Texas Medical Center (TMC) with a $12,800 ER bill after an I‑69 crash. That bill is damages. So is the cracked bumper on his F‑150. Different categories, same goal: make you whole.

Your losses fall into three lanes: bodily (injuries), emotional (how the crash changed your life), and financial (bills, wages, property). Personal injury covers the body and mind; property damage covers your stuff. Think Midtown cyclist hit on Main—shoulder tear, anxiety in traffic, $3,400 bike repair. That’s all recoverable, but in different buckets.

The purpose of a claim is compensation, not a windfall—money to restore what was taken. In civil cases, we prove fault and damages by a preponderance of the evidence (more likely than not). The at‑fault party’s liability insurance usually pays, up to policy limits, once we document each category.

When terms like pain and suffering or impairment get fuzzy, insurers exploit confusion to shrink your number. We’ll show how adjuster playbooks twist definitions—and how we stop it—next.

 

The real obstacle: insurer playbooks designed to shrink Texas claims

On I‑45 near the 610 loop, a client gets rear‑ended. Hours later, a friendly adjuster calls: “We’ll take care of your bumper and the ER co‑pay—no need for a lawyer.” It sounds helpful. It’s not. The pitch ignores pain, missed work, and what tomorrow looks like.

A week passes. The MRI is pending, sleep is shot, and the PCP mentions physical therapy. The adjuster replies, “Let’s wait and see—most people get better in a few weeks.” Meanwhile, bills stack up, treatment gaps appear, and future care gets framed as “speculative.” That’s by design.

  • Delay-and-doubt: Slow‑walk payments and authorizations to pressure a low settlement.
  • Preexisting spin: Recast new symptoms as old problems or normal degeneration on imaging.
  • Soft-tissue skepticism: Discount pain without surgery, fractures, or dramatic scans.
  • Cherry-picked records: Spotlight one “feeling better” note to undercut ongoing treatment.
  • Surveillance/social scrape: Use a photo or clip to claim you aren’t really impaired.

These tactics target the hardest‑to‑price losses—pain, mental anguish, and impairment—while minimizing future care and loss of earning capacity. If they win the framing battle early, juries may never see the full story. That’s why our proof plan starts on day one.

The antidote is evidence: tight records, consistent stories, and the right experts

We pair each type of damage with the strongest proof and the person who supplies it. Use this matrix to see what wins in Texas—and why.

DamagePrimary evidenceWho provides itTexas tip
Medical expenses (past and future)Itemized bills, EOBs (Explanation of Benefits), CPT codes (procedure codes)Treating providers and billing custodians; records via 18.001 affidavits (sworn reasonableness statements)Track mileage to Texas Medical Center (TMC) visits; keep parking receipts
Future medical care (surgeries, therapy, devices, home modifications)Life care plan; physician narrative on causation and medical necessityTreating specialists and an accredited life care plannerAnchor costs to Texas Medical Center (TMC) specialty rates and availability
Lost wages (past time missed) and salary differentialsPayroll records, timesheets, direct deposit stubs, tax returnsEmployer HR (Human Resources) or payroll department lettersDocument PTO (paid time off) and FMLA (Family and Medical Leave Act) impacts
Loss of earning capacity (reduced future ability to earn)Vocational evaluation and economist report with projectionsVocational expert and doctoral-level economist testimonyUse Houston wage data; adjust for restrictions and reasonable accommodations
Pain and suffering (physical pain and day-to-day disruption)Daily symptom journal, provider notes, photos, activity logsYou, family witnesses, and treating providersJournal missed Astros games, church, and parks; capture frequency and intensity
Mental anguish (stress, anxiety, sleep loss linked to the incident)Diagnosis, therapy notes, standardized scales like PHQ-9 (Patient Health Questionnaire-9)Licensed psychologist or psychiatristLink triggers: driving I‑45, crowds at NRG Stadium, or loud noises
Property damage (vehicle or belongings)Repair estimates, photos, FMV (fair market value) compsBody shop invoices and independent appraisersPre- and post-repair photos from I‑10 shop visits

The three types of Texas damages—and how juries value each bucket

Those pre‑ and post‑repair photos from the I‑10 shop are one piece. Here’s how Texas juries sort every piece into three buckets—and what caps may apply. Then we’ll start with medical expenses and the paid/incurred rule.

CategoryWhat it coversTypical proofTexas cap note
Economic damagesMedical bills, lost wages, property loss, rentals, mileage, childcare, devices—past and future.Itemized bills, payroll and tax records, receipts, 18.001 affidavits (billing reasonableness), expert reports.No general cap in standard negligence; medical bills limited by paid/incurred rule (only amounts paid or owed).
Non‑economic damagesPain and suffering, mental anguish, physical impairment, disfigurement, loss of consortium.Your testimony, family and coworker witnesses, journals, provider notes, therapy records, photos.No general cap in standard negligence; healthcare liability claims have non‑economic caps.
Exemplary (punitive) damagesPunishment for fraud, malice, or gross negligence—not compensation.Clear and convincing evidence; unanimous jury finding; pattern and policy evidence.Capped by Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code (CPRC) §41.008 formula (explained below).
  • Jury judgment matters: Non‑economic awards hinge on credibility, consistency, and corroboration.
  • Future counts: Economic damages include future medical needs and loss of earning capacity, discounted to present value.
  • Punitive is rare: Needs gross negligence or malice, clear and convincing proof, and a unanimous jury.
  • Comparative fault reduces: Your award drops by your percentage if you’re 50% or less at fault; 51% bars recovery.

Medical costs are the backbone of economic damages—past bills and future care drive real value

Fault percentages can trim the final check, but the engine of value is provable medical care—past and future. We capture every dollar from ER and hospital care at the Texas Medical Center (TMC) and Memorial Hermann, surgeries, rehab, prescriptions, braces and prosthetics, and home health. Then we map future needs—follow‑ups, therapies, and devices—so nothing gets missed. That’s how we anchor your claim to records, not guesses.

Here’s the playbook: 18.001 affidavits (sworn statements that bills are reasonable/necessary) streamline proof; we align amounts with paid/incurred (only what’s paid or owed). Bring EOBs (Explanation of Benefits), itemized bills, and imaging. Track mileage, parking, and devices. Example: TMC ER $8–15K, arthroscopic shoulder surgery $35–60K, PT 12–24 visits. We also negotiate hospital, Medicare, Medicaid, and ERISA liens so net recovery matches your life.

  • Emergency care: Ambulance, ER triage, imaging, initial stabilization and pain control.
  • Hospital/surgery: Operating room fees, surgeon and anesthesia, inpatient monitoring, discharge planning.
  • Rehab/therapy: Physical, occupational, and speech therapy; pain management, chiropractic, trigger-point or epidural injections.
  • Pharmacy/devices: Medications, braces, TENS units (nerve stimulators), prosthetics, wheelchairs, walkers, canes, CPAP.
  • Home/transport: Home health aides, wound care, medical transport, mileage and parking logs for appointments.
  • Future care: Specialist follow‑ups, revision surgeries, durable medical equipment, life care plan with economist discounting.

After a collision, treatment follows a predictable path—ER to imaging to therapy to follow-ups. Connect care with a car accident lawyer in Houston to coordinate records and paid/incurred strategy.

Care is on track—now let’s protect your paycheck: lost wages vs. earning capacity in Texas

With treatment moving, the next threat is your income. Lost wages are the pay you missed while you recovered; loss of earning capacity is how your injury reduces what you can earn in the future. We prove the past with employer records; we build the future with a vocational expert and an economist.

A Houston refinery rigger earning $34/hour tears a shoulder. Doctor limits lifting to 20 pounds; overtime drops from 10 hours/week to zero. Reassigned to $22/hour light duty, their economist‑discounted lifetime loss over 20 years can reach $300,000–$400,000, even after accounting for promotions and rehabilitation.

  • Employer verification: Timesheets, wage records, PTO logs, overtime history, and HR letters confirming dates missed and restrictions accommodated.
  • Tax history: W‑2s/1099s (wage and contractor tax forms), tax returns, and bank deposits to anchor pre‑injury earnings and seasonality.
  • Restrictions: Work status notes, impairment ratings, and FCEs (Functional Capacity Evaluations) documenting lifting, pushing, standing, and reach limits.
  • Experts: Vocational analysis (jobs, wages, transferability) and economic projections (growth, inflation, discount to present value) with local labor data.

Heavy-vehicle crashes often sideline skilled workers longer. Talk with a truck accident lawyer in Houston

to protect wage claims and future capacity from day one.

Property damage and out-of-pocket costs: vehicles, rentals, gear, and help at home

While we’re protecting your paycheck, let’s also lock down every property and out‑of‑pocket dollar. We document repair vs. total loss, pursue diminished value (loss of resale value after repair), and claim rentals or rideshares when you’re down a car. Keep receipts for devices, crutches, and home/vehicle modifications; we also track childcare and housekeeping during recovery. Example: $42/day rental for 10 days, $180 in parking, $320 for a shower chair—these add up fast. It counts.

  • Commutes to care: I‑45/I‑10 mileage logs, plus parking near Texas Medical Center visits.
  • Vehicle gap: Towing, storage, appraisal fees, and diminished value after repair.
  • Home changes: Temporary ramps, bathroom rails, widened doorways, and hand‑held showerheads.
  • Caregiving: Temporary childcare, meal prep, laundry, and housekeeping during restricted lifting.

Water wrecks property too—phones, rods, and life jackets need replacing after capsizes or propeller strikes. We handle vessel repairs and property claims tied to boating accidents in Texas

Pain, suffering, and mental anguish: the real human losses Texas law pays for

Fixing a boat or bumper is straightforward; getting back on Beltway 8 or out on the bay without panic isn’t. Texas law pays for that human impact: physical pain (your body hurts), suffering (the day-to-day disruption), and mental anguish (anxiety, fear, sleep loss). Maybe you skip Astros games because noise spikes headaches, or you white-knuckle the Beltway after near-misses.

So how do juries judge this? They look for credibility: steady treatment, consistent stories, and corroboration. Three months of physical therapy, therapist notes on panic while driving, and a spouse describing missed church and tailgates beat a scripted 1–10 number. Understate, don’t overstate. Consistency wins.

  • Daily journal: Track pain scores, missed activities, triggers.
  • Provider notes: Tie symptoms to injury; note treatment side effects.
  • Behavioral health: Therapy records, diagnoses, medication logs.
  • Witnesses: Family and friends describe pre- and post-accident changes.

Scarring and bite-related trauma count too. If an animal attack caused your injuries, speak with a dog bite lawyer Houston

to document fear, nightmares, and visible changes.

 

Physical impairment, disfigurement, and loss of consortium are separate Texas recoveries

Those scars and visible changes we just discussed sit in a separate box: disfigurement. Physical impairment is loss of function beyond pain (tasks you can’t do or do safely). Loss of consortium covers strain on a spouse or parent‑child relationship. We prove these with photos, provider opinions, and witness stories.

  • Impairment: Can’t jog Buffalo Bayou trail or play at Memorial Park.
  • Disfigurement: Facial scarring affecting public‑facing sales and client meetings.
  • Consortium: Reduced intimacy and lost household support strain the family.

Theme‑park ride failures can leave scars and mobility limits—see our guide to amusement park injuries and how we document these losses.

Exemplary (punitive) damages in Texas: when conduct crosses the line and what the caps allow

Those scars and mobility limits are compensatory; when conduct is worse, Texas permits exemplary damages. You need fraud, malice, or gross negligence (an extreme risk the defendant knew about and ignored), proven by clear and convincing evidence—not ordinary negligence. Juries must be unanimous on liability and amount. We focus on pattern proof—prior incidents, ignored policies, intoxication evidence, and data—to meet that higher burden and protect the compensatory verdict from being diluted.

  • Cap formula: Greater of $200,000 OR 2× economic damages + up to $750,000 non-economic (Texas CPRC 41.008).
  • Exceptions: Certain serious felony findings can remove caps, including intoxication manslaughter/assault and other specific crimes listed in CPRC 41.008(c).
  • Practice tip: Build economic damages thoroughly—higher proven economic numbers can raise the punitive cap ceiling under the statute.

A midnight 18‑wheeler barrels through Midtown, driver twice the legal limit and off his route. Company texts show ignored safety rules; prior drunk‑driving warnings surface. Downloaded black‑box data (engine event recorder) confirms speeding and no braking. That combination—intoxication, policy violations, and known extreme risk—supports gross negligence and opens the door to punitive exposure on top of full compensatory damages.

See how we build punitive exposure in 18-wheeler accident case 

and protect compensatory value from insurer tactics.

 

When gross negligence turns fatal: Texas wrongful death vs. survival remedies

  • Wrongful death: Loss of companionship and society, mental anguish, pecuniary loss, and lost support/services for spouse, children, and parents.
  • Survival action: The estate recovers the decedent’s damages from injury to death—medical bills, pain, lost wages—standing in the decedent’s shoes.
  • Funeral/burial: Reasonable funeral, burial, and related travel or memorial expenses are recoverable with receipts and invoices.
  • Exemplary: In qualifying cases of gross negligence or malice, punitive damages may be available in addition to compensation, subject to statutory caps.

Who can sue? Wrongful death may be filed by the spouse, children, and parents; if they don’t file within 3 months, the estate’s representative can, unless a beneficiary objects. Wrongful death proceeds go directly to the beneficiaries and are apportioned by settlement or jury, not to the estate. Survival claims are brought by the estate representative; recovery becomes an estate asset, subject to creditors and probate distribution.

If you’re grieving and unsure where to start, speak with a wrongful death lawyer in Houston for a free case plan and timely filings.

Catastrophic injuries: life care planners and economists turn lifetime needs into provable dollars

Coming from a fatal loss to a lifetime fight? If the crash wasn’t fatal but left a traumatic brain injury (TBI), spinal cord injury (SCI), amputation, or severe burns, we build a life care plan—your roadmap for equipment, therapies, surgeries, medications, and attendant care. Doctors define needs, a planner prices them, and our economist converts decades of costs to present value. Example: wheelchair van $55–75K, home modifications $25–60K, attendant care 8–24 hours/day.

Then we make it real for a jury: day‑in‑the‑life video, function testing, and before/after witnesses. We plan replacements every 3–5 years (chairs, prosthetics) and revision surgeries at 10–15 years. Economists apply medical inflation, select a defensible discount rate, and test ranges. Structured settlements or special needs trusts can protect your benefits. The same rigor applies in airline and general aviation cases—next, we cover common‑carrier duties and NTSB (National Transportation Safety Board) data.

  • Multidisciplinary records: Neuro, PM&R (Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation), pain, psych; consistent causation and necessity across providers.
  • Functional evidence: FCEs (Functional Capacity Evaluations), home assessments, ADL (activities of daily living) limits; transfer videos, ramp/fall risks listed.
  • Economic modeling: Inflation, discount rate, sensitivity analysis; replacement cycles, life expectancy, present value and structured payout scenarios compared.

Start a free plan with a Houston catastrophic injury lawyern—life care, economists, and liens aligned from day one.

Aviation injuries: federal rules, cross-border claims, and the Texas damages playbook

That same life‑care rigor matters in aviation cases—especially when federal rules and cross‑border facts shape value. Commercial carriers (airlines) operate under common‑carrier duties; general aviation (private planes, helicopters) follows different contexts. FAA (Federal Aviation Administration) and NTSB (National Transportation Safety Board) investigations frame liability. Venue and choice‑of‑law can change caps and timelines. For non‑economic proof, we document fear‑of‑flying, panic on boarding, and lost uptime—missed client trips, canceled conferences, and detours that stall your career.

Bring boarding passes, seat assignments, and incident reports; we secure flight data recorder downloads, maintenance logs, and turbulence metrics. Our team matches human‑factors analysis, aeronautical engineering, and medical proof of aerophobia (clinically significant fear of flying). If an international leg triggers the Montreal Convention (treaty with a two‑year limit and strict liability thresholds), we choose venue early and preserve foreign‑carrier evidence. Bottom line: build liability with data, then translate disruption into dollars.

Talk with our aviation and commercial airline accident attorney for a rapid evidence plan.

Texas construction and workplace injuries: workers’ comp limits and third‑party claims for full damages

That rapid evidence plan you just saw for aviation cases works the same on job sites. Workers’ comp covers some medical and partial wages, but not pain, impairment, or full future earning capacity. If your employer is a Texas non‑subscriber (no workers’ comp immunity) or a third party caused the injury, we can pursue the whole value. Example: a $29/hour ironworker losing overtime and promotion track faces a six‑figure earning‑capacity hit.

Who can be on the hook? Subcontractors, delivery vendors, equipment rental companies, or a motorist who plows through a lane closure. We freeze evidence fast: incident reports, foreman texts, sign‑in logs, safety meeting sheets, and OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Administration) citations. We pull CCTV (closed‑circuit video), telematics, and maintenance records. Example: a vendor forklift without a backup alarm pins a laborer—policy violations and data logs prove negligence.

Talk to a construction accident attorney in Houston 

for same‑day evidence preservation and a damages roadmap.

 

Texas rules that swing value: fault, caps, deadlines, and interest

That same‑day evidence plan only pays off if we steer around the Texas rules that quietly shrink value. These statewide levers—fault splits, caps, deadlines, and interest—can add or subtract six figures. CPRC means the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code; SOL is the statute of limitations. Act early, frame early, and protect your number. Next, see them in action.

  • 51% bar (CPRC §33.001): Recovery is barred if you’re over 50% at fault; otherwise your damages are reduced by your percentage.
  • Medical-malpractice caps (Ch. 74): Non‑economic damages capped at $250k per provider and up to $500k total against institutions.
  • Punitive caps (Ch. 41): Greater of $200k or 2× economic plus up to $750k non‑economic; certain felony findings remove caps.
  • SOL/notice: Generally two years; shorter notice for government entities (TTCA); some claims have special rules for minors or med‑mal.
  • Interest: Pre‑ and post‑judgment interest (Texas Finance Code) accrues on past damages; punitive excluded—timing can add or erase leverage.

Now see timing, fault, and caps in action: three quick Texas snapshots

Illustrative only; outcomes vary by facts, medical proof, venue, coverage, and liens. No promises. We’ll explain your specific range after we review records and evidence.

  • I‑10 rear-end (moderate TBI): Medical actually paid/owed $68k; wages $42k; non-economic $250–400k; 10% fault cut applied; net total $324–459k before liens/fees.
  • Beltway 8 18-wheeler (spinal surgery): Economic $220k base; non-economic $500–900k; punitive exposure for intoxication; capped by Texas punitive formula, section 41.008; policy-limits demand increased leverage.
  • Dog bite in Montrose (facial scarring): Disfigurement $150–300k; trauma counseling $3–7k; future scar revision $12–25k; settlement structured to fund procedures.

From that Montrose dog‑bite snapshot to your case: your do‑this‑first Texas documentation plan

After that Montrose dog‑bite snapshot, here’s how you make value stick: build contemporaneous, corroborated records—created now, not later—so insurers, judges, and juries can’t poke holes. Follow this checklist to keep every dollar defensible. Questions? Fast FAQs are next.

Step 1 – Medical foundation: Get same-day evaluation; follow referrals; avoid gaps; keep discharge and visit summaries; list medications, work limits, and home-care instructions.

Step 2 – Expense vault: Save every bill and receipt; track mileage and parking; record rentals, rideshares, childcare, devices, and house help in one running ledger.

Step 3 – Income proof: Request employer wage letters; save paystubs and deposit screenshots; note paid time off used, missed overtime, and schedule changes from restrictions.

Step 4 – Journal the human cost: Daily pain scores, limits, sleep, triggers; list missed Houston events—Astros games, church, festivals, kids’ sports—and why.

Step 5 – Photo/video: Time‑stamp injuries, scars, braces, and mobility aids; capture vehicle and property damage before repair; update monthly as healing or complications appear.

Step 6 – Expert alignment: Ask providers about future care and costs; consider vocational and economic consults to project earning capacity and present‑value future medical needs.

Step 7 – Legal strategy: Send preservation letters; secure dash‑cam and security video; don’t sign releases; avoid recorded statements with adjusters; route all contact through counsel.

Texas Personal Injury Damages: Quick FAQ

You just saw Step 7—route everything through counsel. Now, rapid answers to calm the big worries. Texas-specific, plain English—not legal advice. Call us for guidance on your facts.

  • Are pain-and-suffering caps legal in Texas?: No caps in standard negligence. Medical malpractice caps non‑economic at $250k per provider, up to $500k total for institutions.
  • How long do I have to file?: Two years. Government claims require TTCA (Texas Tort Claims Act) notice. Minors and medical malpractice exceptions can alter deadlines—call early.
  • How are non-economic damages calculated?: Juries use judgment from your evidence and credibility. Insurers use crude multipliers. Better proof—journals, therapy notes, witnesses—drives higher, defensible numbers.
  • Are settlements taxable?: Compensatory for physical injuries (medical bills, wages, pain) is generally not federally taxable. Punitive damages and pre/post‑judgment interest are taxable. Confirm with a tax pro.
  • Do I need experts?: Often yes. Future care, impairment, and earning capacity usually need medical, vocational, and economic experts; 18.001 affidavits (sworn billing proof) support medical bill reasonableness.
  • What if I’m partly at fault?: Texas proportionate responsibility reduces recovery by your percentage. At 51% or more, you recover nothing. Early framing and evidence keep your number.

Local matters when the 51% rule is on the line: Houston‑rooted, Texas‑wide representation

Early framing is easier when we know your backyard. We work the Texas Medical Center (TMC), I‑10 (Interstate 10), I‑45 (Interstate 45), and Loop 610 (Interstate 610) corridors—Heights, Montrose, Sugar Land, Katy, The Woodlands, Clear Lake, Galveston. Harris, Fort Bend, and Montgomery juries read cases differently; we tailor proof to each.

We try cases at the Harris County Civil Courthouse and regularly appear in Fort Bend (Richmond), Montgomery (Conroe), and Galveston. We coordinate with Memorial Hermann, Houston Methodist, and HCA Healthcare (hospital network) to gather records, 18.001 affidavits, and liens. Want doorstep help? We’ll meet at TMC, your home, or jobsite and move fast.

Why Texans Choose Us
Trial-ready from day one, small-caseload attention, and Spanish-friendly intake. Contingency fee—no fee unless we win. Direct attorney contact, not a call center.

Talk directly with our trial team today—get your Texas damages map in one call

We’ll review your facts and records same day, identify every recoverable category, and explain caps, liens, and deadlines in plain English. No pressure, no upfront cost, and no fee unless we win. Most callers leave with a clear range and their next three steps in under 20 minutes.

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