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What to Do When a Dog Attacks Your Child
Get your child medical care first, then preserve what you can about the dog and its owner. A bite that looks small can carry deep puncture damage and a high infection risk, so a child should be seen by a doctor even when the wound seems minor.
Once your child is safe, your family almost certainly has a claim. The owner of the dog is responsible for what their animal did, and the law treats the injured child as the person owed compensation.
Children are not small adults in these cases. A dog reaches a child's face and head far more easily than an adult's, so the same dog that would bite an adult on the arm can do lasting damage to a child.
That difference shapes everything about the claim, from the medical care your child will need to the way a settlement has to be structured to protect them.
A child who was bitten did nothing wrong. The questions that decide the case are how badly your child was hurt, what their future care will cost, and whose insurance answers for it.
The owner's insurance company will still look for ways to pay less, even when the dog plainly caused the harm and the victim is a child.
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- Children are the most common dog bite victims, and bites to the face are common
- A child's claim must fund reconstructive care for years
- $100M+ recovered for injured clients and families nationwide
- Free, confidential review 24/7. No fee unless we win
Why Children Suffer the Worst Dog Bite Injuries
A child's height puts the face, head, and neck right at the level of a dog's mouth. An adult who is bitten is usually struck on the hand, arm, or leg. A small child is bitten where the worst and most visible damage gets done.
The wounds also go deeper relative to a child's body. A child has less muscle and thinner skin over the bone, so a bite that an adult might shrug off can tear into tissue, nerves, and bone in a child. That is why pediatric bite cases so often involve the lips, cheeks, eyelids, ears, and scalp.
The size difference matters too. A child cannot pull away, shield their face, or fight off an animal that an adult could push back. A dog that knocks a child down has direct access to the head for the seconds it takes to do permanent harm.
Our dog bite lawyers see how this plays out in the medical record. The injuries are deeper, and they cluster in the places that are hardest to repair and the most difficult for a child to live with.
If you want to talk through what your child is facing, our dog bite lawyers can walk you through it with no pressure and no fee to start.
Children Are the Most Common Dog Bite Victims
Children are bitten more often than any other group, and they are hurt more seriously when it happens.[1] The combination of a child's height, their instinct to approach animals, and a dog's reach makes them the population most exposed to a serious bite.
There is a hard fact families struggle with: the dog is often one the child knew. A neighbor's dog, a relative's dog, a friend's pet at a backyard gathering. The animal that bites a child is frequently familiar, which is exactly why a child felt safe getting close.
That familiarity makes the aftermath painful in a way a stranger's dog would not. Parents feel torn about pursuing a claim against someone they know, and the dog's owner often feels defensive. None of that changes the medical bills, the surgeries, or the fact that a child was badly hurt.
A claim is not an accusation that the owner is a bad person. It is the path to the insurance coverage that exists to pay for exactly this kind of harm, which is a separate thing from blame.
A dog bite to a child usually lands on the face, because that is what is within a dog's reach, and the child grows up living with the scars. When a child is bitten, the case is not just about emergency treatment. It is about scarring, future medical care, emotional trauma, and the long-term impact of an injury suffered at a young age.
The Lasting Toll: Scars, Surgeries, and Fear
A child's dog bite injury is rarely over when the wound closes. Facial scars on a growing child often require repeated reconstructive surgery across years, because a repair that fits a five-year-old does not fit the same child at twelve.
That is the part insurers like to ignore. A scar that looks settled today can need revision after revision as the face grows, and each surgery carries its own recovery, cost, and risk. The full medical picture for a child stretches well past the original hospital stay. How that disfigurement is documented and valued is its own subject, covered on our page about permanent scarring and disfigurement.
The harm goes beyond the physical. Many children develop a lasting fear of dogs after an attack, along with sleep problems, anxiety, and the distress of being marked by a visible scar at an age when other children notice. That psychological injury is real, and it belongs in the claim alongside the surgical bills.
"A child's scar does not stop changing when the wound heals. It grows as they do, and so does the cost of repairing it."
The point of valuing a child's case carefully is to make sure the recovery covers the surgeries and counseling that are still years away, well beyond the bills already on the table.
Who Is Liable, and Whose Insurance Pays
The dog's owner is the party responsible, and the money almost always comes from a homeowners or renters insurance policy. Most home insurance covers dog bite liability, which is what stands behind the claim even when the family never expected to be in this position.
How strict that responsibility is depends on your state. Many states apply strict liability, meaning the owner is on the hook for the bite whether or not the dog had ever shown aggression. Other states still follow a version of the older one-bite rule, where the owner's knowledge of the dog's dangerous tendencies matters. Which rule applies, and how it applies, varies by state.
The familiar-dog situation adds a complication worth understanding. When the dog belongs to a relative the family lives with, or to the same household, the policy that would normally pay may exclude household members or treat the claim differently. That does not mean there is no coverage, but it does mean the coverage question needs a careful look.
The mechanics of how a homeowners policy responds, what it covers, and where the limits sit are detailed on our page about the homeowners insurance that pays a dog bite claim.
How a Child's Dog Bite Settlement Works
A settlement for an injured child is handled differently from an adult's, because the law builds in extra steps to protect the child's money. A parent cannot accept a check and spend it. In most states a judge has to review and approve any settlement involving a minor.
That court approval is a safeguard, not an obstacle. The judge looks at whether the amount is fair given the injury and the child's future needs, which is one more reason the future medical picture has to be fully documented before anything is signed.
The funds themselves are protected for the child. Courts commonly require the money to be held in a blocked account the child can reach at adulthood, or placed into a structured settlement that pays out over time. The goal is to make sure the recovery is still there when the child is older and may face further surgery.
For a child with years of reconstructive care ahead, that structure can be an advantage. It can time payments to arrive when surgeries are likely, rather than handing over a lump sum that has to last and stretch.
What a Child's Dog Bite Claim Is Worth and the Deadline
There is no honest average for a child's dog bite claim. The value comes from the severity of the injury, the location of the scarring, the cost of the reconstructive surgeries still ahead, and the psychological harm, not from a number someone read online.
The future medical cost is the piece that most often gets undervalued. A child facing scar revisions over a decade has a claim that has to account for surgeries that have not happened yet, which takes medical projection rather than a tally of today's bills. How those pieces fit together is covered in our overview of what a dog bite claim is worth.
The deadline works differently for a child too. Many states pause, or toll, a minor's filing deadline until the child reaches adulthood, which can give a family more time than an adult would have. That pause varies by state, some states limit it and some claims tied to the parents have shorter windows, so the deadline that protects your child should be confirmed early rather than assumed.
Confirming the deadline early also protects the evidence. Medical records, photographs of the wound as it healed, and witness memories of the attack are far easier to secure now than years from now.
Parents of Child Dog Bite Victims: Common Questions
- Q: Why are dog bites more serious for children?
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A: A child's height puts the face, head, and neck within easy reach of a dog's mouth, so children are bitten where the damage is deepest and most visible. Their skin is thinner and they cannot pull away or shield themselves, which is why pediatric bites so often involve the lips, cheeks, eyelids, ears, and scalp and why they tend to leave lasting scars.
- Q: Can we recover if it was a friend's or relative's dog?
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A: Usually yes. The dog's owner is responsible, and the claim is typically paid by their homeowners or renters insurance, which exists for exactly this. Pursuing a claim is not an accusation against your friend or relative, it is a path to the coverage. The one situation that needs a careful look is when the dog belongs to your own household, because some policies treat household members differently. We can check the coverage for you.
- Q: How is a settlement for an injured child handled?
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A: Differently from an adult's, because the law protects the child's money. In most states a judge has to review and approve any settlement for a minor, and the funds are commonly held in a blocked account until the child reaches adulthood or placed into a structured settlement that pays out over time. The goal is to make sure the recovery is still there when the child is older and may need further surgery.
- Q: How long do we have to file a claim for our child?
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A: Many states pause a child's filing deadline until they reach adulthood, which can give your family more time than an adult would have. That pause varies by state, some limit it and some related claims have shorter windows, so the deadline should be confirmed early rather than assumed. Acting sooner also protects the medical records, photographs, and witness memories that prove what happened.
- Q: What is a child's dog bite case worth?
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A: There is no honest average. The value depends on the severity and location of the injury, the scarring, the cost of the reconstructive surgeries still ahead as the child grows, and the psychological harm. The future medical cost is the piece most often undervalued, because a child may face scar revisions over many years, so a careful claim projects those future surgeries rather than counting only today's bills.
Your Child Was Hurt. Let Us Carry the Legal Side.
A child who was bitten deserves full medical care, every reconstructive surgery their healing requires, and a recovery from the dog's owner that accounts for the years of treatment and fear still ahead, not a quick lowball that ends when the wound closes.
The trial lawyers at Lawsuit Legal handle a child's case the way it deserves, documenting the future medical need in full and pressing the owner's insurer for what the injury will actually cost over time. Speak with our team for a free, confidential review and an honest answer on where your child's case stands.
Call us and let us take the legal weight off your family while you focus on your child.
We help parents of children bitten by a neighbor's dog, families facing years of reconstructive surgery, and children left with scars and fear after an attack.
$100 million-plus recovered. A 98% recovery rate. More than 40,000 cases handled. You pay nothing unless we win compensation for you.
Call (888) 713-6653 or fill out the form for a free, confidential case evaluation now.
Free Case Evaluation
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