
Personal Injury Lawyer in Baltimore County, Maryland
Personal injury law in Maryland allows an injured person to seek compensation when another party’s negligence causes harm. The foundation is Md. Code, Courts & Judicial Proceedings Art. § 5-101, which sets a three-year statute of limitations from the date of injury. Maryland is one of only four states plus DC that follows the contributory negligence doctrine—if you are found even 1% at fault for the accident, you cannot recover any damages. This makes immediate evidence preservation and skilled legal guidance critical.
Last verified: March 2026 | District Court of MD for Baltimore County – Towson | Maryland General Assembly
Official resources: Md. Code, Courts & Judicial Proceedings Art. § 5-101 (official Maryland General Assembly) and the District Court of MD for Baltimore County – Towson website.
Personal injury claims in Baltimore County are filed at the District Court (claims up to $30,000) or Circuit Court (claims over $30,000) located at 120 East Chesapeake Avenue, Towson. Maryland’s contributory negligence rule demands meticulous evidence collection from day one.
- Seek immediate medical attention and document all injuries.
- Preserve evidence: photos, witness contacts, police reports.
- Consult a personal injury attorney before speaking with insurance adjusters.
- Your attorney will investigate liability and send a demand letter.
- If a settlement isn’t reached, file a lawsuit before the three-year deadline.
- Proceed through discovery, depositions, and potentially trial.
In Baltimore County, personal injury claims operate under Maryland’s contributory negligence standard—even minimal fault can eliminate recovery—with a three-year filing deadline from the injury date.
| Offense Type | Legal Standard | Statute of Limitations | Filing Venue | Key Consideration |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Car Accident | Negligence | 3 years | District or Circuit Court | Contributory negligence applies |
| Slip and Fall | Premises Liability | 3 years | District or Circuit Court | Property owner duty of care |
| Medical Malpractice | Professional Negligence | 3 years | Circuit Court | Certificate of qualified experienced required |
| Wrongful Death | Md. Code § 11-109 | 3 years from death | Circuit Court | Separate claim for survivors |
Results may vary. Each case depends on unique facts and evidence.
Law Offices Of SRIS, P.C. was founded in 1997 by former prosecutor Mr. Sris. The firm brings over 120 years of combined attorney experience to personal injury cases in Maryland. Our approach is case-specific, focusing on the strict demands of Maryland’s contributory negligence system to protect client recovery.
Mr. Sris, Founder and Managing Attorney. Bar admissions: Virginia, Maryland, District of Columbia, New Jersey, New York. Former prosecutor with decades of litigation experience handling complex injury claims.
Law Offices Of SRIS, P.C. has achieved 4,739+ documented case results firm-wide across VA, MD, NJ, NY, and DC, with a 93%+ favorable outcome rate. Our team handles the details of Maryland’s contributory negligence system to seek maximum compensation.
Results may vary. Prior results do not aim for a similar outcome.
Our Rockville/MD location serves clients at Baltimore County courts, accessible via I-695, I-83, and I-95. As a personal injury lawyer near Towson and surrounding communities, we offer 24/7 phone consultations at (888) 437-7747—meetings by appointment only.
Law Offices Of SRIS, P.C.
Rockville/MD Location — Montgomery County area
By appointment only
Phone: (888) 437-7747 | Local: (888)-437-7747
We serve the Baltimore County area and surrounding communities including Towson, Dundalk, Essex, Catonsville, Pikesville, Cockeysville, Reisterstown, Owings Mills, Perry Hall, White Marsh, and Timonium.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the statute of limitations for personal injury in Baltimore County, Maryland?
3 years from the date of injury under Md. Code, Courts & Judicial Proceedings Art. § 5-101. Maryland also follows contributory negligence (1% fault = no recovery). Claims are filed at the District Court of MD for Baltimore County – Towson.
Is Maryland a contributory negligence state?
Yes. Maryland follows contributory negligence—even 1% plaintiff fault bars ALL recovery. This is one of the strictest rules in the nation. Evidence preservation from day one is critical for Baltimore County claims.
Where are personal injury lawsuits filed in Baltimore County?
Claims up to $30,000 are filed in the District Court of MD for Baltimore County – Towson. Claims over $30,000 are filed in the Baltimore County Circuit Court. The address for both is 120 East Chesapeake Avenue, Towson, MD 21286.
What is required for a medical malpractice case in Maryland?
Maryland requires a certificate of qualified experienced filed with the complaint and mandatory arbitration before trial. This adds 3-6 months to the timeline. The three-year statute of limitations applies from the date the injury was discovered.
How does Maryland’s contributory negligence rule affect my case?
If you are found even 1% at fault for the accident, you cannot recover any damages. This makes thorough investigation, accident reconstruction, and witness statements essential from the beginning to counter insurance defense arguments.
For more information, see our Maryland personal injury lawyer hub page. We also serve neighboring areas including Montgomery County personal injury and Prince George’s County personal injury. If you need other legal services in Baltimore County, consider criminal defense or DUI defense. Learn more about our Maryland attorneys.
Last verified: March 2026. Information current as of 2026-02-15. Laws change—contact Law Offices Of SRIS, P.C. at (888) 437-7747 for current guidance.
