Lawyers for Medical Malpractice in Maryland
If you or a loved one has suffered due to medical negligence in Maryland, you may be entitled to compensation. Medical malpractice cases in Maryland are governed by strict state laws, including time limits and damage caps. It’s important to work with an experienced attorney who understands the local legal landscape.
Understanding Medical Malpractice in Maryland
Medical malpractice in Maryland occurs when a healthcare provider breaches the standard of care, resulting in patient harm. Common examples include:
- Misdiagnosis or delayed diagnosis
- Surgical mistakes
- Medication errors
- Birth-related injuries
- Failure to obtain informed consent
- Anesthesia errors
- Failure to monitor vital signs
- Foreign objects left in the body after surgery
- Failure to order necessary tests or lab work
- Improper discharge or aftercare
- Emergency room negligence
- Radiology errors (e.g., misread X-rays or scans)
- Hospital-acquired infections due to unsanitary conditions
- Nursing negligence (e.g., failure to report symptoms)
- Dental malpractice
- Delayed treatment of a known condition
- Negligent cosmetic or plastic surgery
- Wrong-patient or wrong-site procedures
- Failure to refer to a specialist
To s\\ucceed in a malpractice claim, the patient must prove negligence, injury, and a direct link between the two.
Maryland Medical Malpractice Laws at a Glance
Statute of Limitations
3 years from the date the injury was discovered, but no more than 5 years from the date of the malpractice. Maryland’s law provides that a medical malpractice claim must be filed within the earlier of: 5 years from when the injury actually occurred, or 3 years from when the injury was discovered (the “discovery rule”). This effectively means if you discover the malpractice right away, you have 3 years from that date (which is within the 5-year limit). If you don’t discover it for, say, 2 years, you would then have 3 years from discovery (total of 5 years from the event in that scenario). However, under no circumstances can you file more than 5 years after the malpractice took place. For minors, the clock doesn’t start until they reach age 11 in most cases, and special rules apply for injuries to minors under 16 involving reproductive harm.
Damage Caps
Maryland has a cap on non-economic damages in medical malpractice cases. This cap is adjusted annually for inflation. For 2025, the non-economic damages cap in Maryland malpractice cases is likely around $830,000 (the cap increases by $15,000 each year on January 1). If the malpractice resulted in wrongful death with two or more beneficiaries, the cap is 125% of that amount (so roughly $1,037,500 for 2025). These caps apply to pain and suffering and other non-economic harms combined, regardless of the number of defendants. Economic damages like medical bills and lost wages are not capped.
Expert Testimony Required
“Maryland requires a Certificate of Merit (also known as a Certificate of a Qualified Expert) early in a malpractice case. Within 90 days of filing the lawsuit, the plaintiff must file a certificate from a qualified medical expert stating that the defendant’s care was negligent and caused the plaintiff’s injury. The expert must meet certain qualifications (e.g., board certified in the same field, not a regular witness for plaintiffs, etc.). Additionally, Maryland has the Health Care Alternative Dispute Resolution Office: initially, malpractice claims are filed there for arbitration, but parties often waive arbitration to proceed in court after filing the certificate. In court, expert testimony is indispensable; without an expert to support the claim of negligence, a Maryland malpractice case will be dismissed.”
💡 Always consult a qualified attorney for case-specific guidance.
Top Cities in Maryland to Find a Lawyer
Explore medical malpractice attorneys near you:
Medical Malpractice Lawyers in Maryland by city
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes, you can include a hospital as a defendant in a Maryland medical malpractice lawsuit if the hospital’s employees were negligent. Maryland hospitals are vicariously liable for the actions of their staff (nurses, technicians, etc.) when those actions cause patient harm. For example, if a nurse at a Baltimore hospital gives the wrong medication dosage and it injures a patient, the patient can sue the hospital for malpractice. The claim will go through Maryland’s pre-suit process (certificate of merit and initially filing with the arbitration office), but you can certainly pursue the hospital. You can also directly sue a hospital for its own institutional negligence (like negligent credentialing of a surgeon or inadequate staffing) if that is a factor in the case.
Yes, you can include a hospital as a defendant in a Maryland medical malpractice lawsuit if the hospital’s employees were negligent. Maryland hospitals are vicariously liable for the actions of their staff (nurses, technicians, etc.) when those actions cause patient harm. For example, if a nurse at a Baltimore hospital gives the wrong medication dosage and it injures a patient, the patient can sue the hospital for malpractice. The claim will go through Maryland’s pre-suit process (certificate of merit and initially filing with the arbitration office), but you can certainly pursue the hospital. You can also directly sue a hospital for its own institutional negligence (like negligent credentialing of a surgeon or inadequate staffing) if that is a factor in the case.
In Maryland, as in most states, malpractice lawyers work on a contingency fee basis. You do not pay upfront. The lawyer’s fee will typically be a percentage of any recovery (commonly around one-third, though it can vary). Maryland does not have a statutory cap specifically on attorney fees in malpractice cases, but contingency agreements are subject to general oversight for reasonableness. If your lawyer successfully obtains a settlement or judgment, they will take the agreed percentage as their fee. If the case does not result in compensation, you generally owe no attorney’s fee. Always review the fee agreement—Maryland lawyers will detail the percentage and how litigation expenses are handled in the contract when you hire them.
Need Legal Help in Maryland?
Don’t wait. If you believe you were a victim of medical negligence, explore your options today.
👇















































































































































