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Hit by a Drunk Driver in Tennessee?
Tennessee law is built to make an impaired driver pay, and three rules stack in the victim's favor from the start.
The filing deadline can double, from one year to two, when the driver is criminally prosecuted for the crash.
The state's cap on non-economic damages disappears once intoxication is proved.
Punitive damages, meant to punish rather than repay, are squarely on the table against someone who chose to drive drunk.
None of that happens on its own. Each advantage carries conditions, and the drunk driver's insurer will work to keep every one of them from applying.
A Tennessee drunk driving accident lawyer makes the law do what it was written to do.
Call (888) 713-6653 for a free case review, day or night.
How Tennessee Law Treats a Drunk Driving Victim
- The one-year filing deadline can extend to two when the driver is criminally prosecuted (T.C.A. § 28-3-104)
- The $750,000 cap on non-economic damages does not protect an intoxicated driver
- Punitive damages are available to punish the decision to drive drunk
- A DUI conviction can conclusively establish the driver's fault in your civil case (Bowen v. Arnold)
- 21.3% of Tennessee drivers carry no insurance; your UM coverage often becomes the recovery
- The claim against a bar runs on a separate, harder track with a shorter clock

How a Drunk Driving Case Differs From an Ordinary Crash
A collision with a careless driver and a collision with a drunk one are the same wreck to your body and two different cases in the courthouse. The impaired-driving case reaches further, on a longer deadline, past a cap that would otherwise limit it, and toward a category of damages an ordinary negligence case rarely touches. The national picture is on our drunk driving accident page; below is how Tennessee law specifically rewards the victim who moves early.
| Ordinary Negligent Driver | Drunk Driver | |
|---|---|---|
| Filing deadline | One year (T.C.A. § 28-3-104) | Up to two years when the driver is prosecuted, protecting only the claim against that driver |
| Non-economic damages cap | $750,000 ($1,000,000 for catastrophic loss) | No cap when intoxication substantially impaired judgment |
| Punitive damages | Rare; reserved for egregious conduct | A textbook basis: the reckless choice to drive impaired |
| Effect of a criminal conviction | Usually no parallel criminal case | A DUI conviction can conclusively establish fault |
Each row is a rule with its own conditions, and each one is worked through below.
When Tennessee's One-Year Deadline Doubles, and When It Does Not
Tennessee gives injury victims one year to file, the shortest deadline in the country. A drunk driving crash can extend that to two years, but only when three conditions are all met under T.C.A. § 28-3-104(a)(2).[1]
- Criminal charges are brought against the person alleged to have caused the injury
- The prosecution begins within one year of the crash, commenced by a law enforcement officer, a district attorney general, or a grand jury
- The civil suit is the injured person's and it runs against the party who was prosecuted
Two limits inside that rule end cases when they are missed. A municipal ordinance violation, the kind of local charge that is not a true criminal prosecution, does not trigger the extension. And the extra year protects only the claim against the driver who was prosecuted. It does nothing for a claim against a bar that overserved him, an employer whose vehicle he was driving, or the owner who handed him the keys. Those defendants stay on the original one-year clock.
That split is the trap. A family that assumes a DUI charge bought two years for the whole case can watch the deadline against every other defendant expire while the criminal matter drags on. The way the deadline interacts with each potential defendant is the first thing to map, and it is covered in depth on our Tennessee statute of limitations page.
Why the Damages Cap Disappears When a Driver Is Impaired
Tennessee caps non-economic damages, the pain, the disfigurement, the lost enjoyment of life, at $750,000 for most injuries and $1,000,000 for catastrophic loss. Intoxication removes that ceiling. The statute lifts the cap entirely when the defendant was under the influence of alcohol, drugs, or an intoxicant to the extent that judgment was substantially impaired.[2]
For a victim, the difference is not abstract. A drunk driving crash that leaves a young person with a brain injury and a lifetime of noneconomic harm is precisely the case the cap would otherwise cut down, and precisely the case the intoxication exception frees from it. The full mechanics of the cap and its exceptions are on our Tennessee damage caps page. Proving impairment to that standard is evidence work: the BAC result, the field tests, the officer's observations, and the timeline of drinking before the crash.
Punitive Damages and the Choice to Drive Drunk
Compensation makes a victim whole. Punitive damages do something else: they punish conduct the law wants deterred, and driving drunk is the textbook example. Under Hodges v. S.C. Toof & Co., 833 S.W.2d 896 (Tenn. 1992), a plaintiff can win punitive damages by proving, with clear and convincing evidence, that the defendant acted intentionally, fraudulently, maliciously, or recklessly. A driver who got behind the wheel impaired fits the reckless standard by the nature of the act.
Tennessee tries the punitive question separately. The trial is bifurcated: the jury first decides compensation and whether punitive conduct exists, then hears evidence about the defendant's finances before setting a punitive amount. The statute caps punitive damages at the greater of two times the compensatory award or $500,000, and the same intoxication exception that removes the noneconomic cap removes this one too. The court applies the cap after the verdict; the jury is not told about it. How these awards are argued and defended is broken down on our Tennessee punitive damages page.
How a DUI Conviction Strengthens the Victim's Civil Claim
A criminal conviction for driving under the influence does heavy lifting in the civil case. In Bowen ex rel. Doe v. Arnold, 502 S.W.3d 102 (Tenn. 2016), the Tennessee Supreme Court held that a defendant convicted after a full and fair opportunity to litigate is conclusively estopped from relitigating the underlying facts in a later civil suit.[3] In plain terms: once the driver is convicted of the DUI that hurt you, he cannot stand in the civil trial and argue he was sober. Violating the DUI statute is also negligence per se, a second route to fault that does not wait on the criminal outcome.
A first-offense DUI in Tennessee is a Class A misdemeanor carrying a minimum of 48 consecutive hours in jail, a fine between $350 and $1,500, and a one-year license revocation, with a seven-day minimum if the driver's blood alcohol was 0.15 or higher.[4] Those are the criminal consequences. They are not your recovery.
The Criminal Case Is Not Your Case
The prosecutor represents the State, not you. Their goal is a conviction and a sentence, and they can win that and leave your losses untouched. The civil case is the one that values your medical bills, your lost income, and your suffering, and it reaches defendants the criminal court never charges, the bar, the employer, the vehicle owner. A conviction helps the civil case; it does not replace it.
Restitution Is Not Compensation
A criminal court can order restitution, but restitution is narrow, often limited to out-of-pocket amounts, capped by what the defendant can pay, and collected slowly if at all. It is not designed to make an injured person whole. Treating a restitution order as the end of the matter leaves the real compensation, the part that accounts for a permanent injury, on the table.
The Injuries a Drunk Driving Crash Leaves Behind
Tennessee recorded 1,194 traffic deaths in 2024 and 1,045 in 2025.[5] In 2023, 371 of the state's traffic deaths involved an alcohol-impaired driver, roughly 28 percent of the total.[6] Behind each number is a crash someone did not have to survive, and the injuries that follow tend to run severe because an impaired driver rarely brakes.
- Head-on and wrong-way collisions - The signature drunk driving crash, and the deadliest, when an impaired driver crosses the center line or enters a highway the wrong way
- Traumatic brain and spinal cord injuries - High-speed, unbraked impacts that leave lifetime disability, ongoing care, and lost earning capacity
- Broken bones and internal injuries - Fractures, organ damage, and surgeries that turn into months away from work
- Pedestrian and cyclist strikes - An impaired driver against an unprotected person is as one-sided as a crash gets
- Fatal crashes - Handled as wrongful death claims for the family, on the deadline the criminal charges can extend
The broader crash picture for the state sits on our Tennessee car accident statistics page, and the general crash claim on our Tennessee car accident page.
What a Tennessee Drunk Driving Victim Can Recover
Economic damages recover the measurable losses: medical care past and future, rehabilitation, lost wages, and the earning capacity a permanent injury removes. Non-economic damages cover the pain, the disfigurement, and the life the injury took away, uncapped when the driver was intoxicated. Punitive damages sit on top when the conduct earns them.
Tennessee's modified comparative fault runs in the background of all of it. A victim kept below 50 percent at fault still recovers, reduced by their share; at 50 percent or more, recovery is barred. Against a drunk driver, the fault picture usually favors the victim, which is exactly why the defense will try to shift a slice of blame onto you. When the crash is fatal, the claim passes to the family under Tennessee's wrongful death statute.
When the Impaired Driver Has No Insurance
An impaired driver is often an underinsured or uninsured one. Tennessee has the fifth-highest uninsured rate in the country, with 21.3 percent of drivers carrying no coverage, and the state's minimum liability limits of 25/50/25 rarely cover a serious injury. This is where your own policy earns its keep. Tennessee insurers must include uninsured motorist coverage in every auto policy unless the driver rejected it in writing, so many victims carry protection they never think about until they need it. Mapping every layer of coverage, the driver's policy, your UM coverage, and any umbrella, is detailed on our Tennessee uninsured motorist coverage page.
Can a Tennessee Bar Share the Blame?
Sometimes, but Tennessee sets the hardest bar in the country. A seller of alcohol is liable only if a jury of twelve finds, beyond a reasonable doubt, that it sold to a person it knew was under 21 or to someone visibly intoxicated, and that the sale caused the crash. That criminal standard, dropped into a civil statute, makes these claims rare and evidence-driven; the full analysis is on our Tennessee dram shop law page. A private party host who poured free drinks for an adult guest is generally not liable at all, though the rules shift when minors were served, which our Tennessee social host liability page covers.
The takeaway for a victim is simple. Test the bar case fast, because its clock is one year no matter what happens in the criminal court. But never let it distract from the case that almost always carries the recovery: the one against the drunk driver.
Why Injured Tennesseans Choose Lawsuit Legal
A drunk driving case looks like a slam dunk from the outside and rarely feels like one from the inside. The insurer still fights the value, still hunts for a share of fault to pin on you, and still counts on a victim who does not know that the cap is gone and punitive damages are live. Insurance companies know our reputation, and the number on the table moves when the firm across it is one that tries these cases instead of settling them cheap.
We have recovered results in more than 40,000 cases with a 98 percent recovery rate, and we prepare every serious drunk driving claim as if it will be tried, because the ones that settle well are the ones the other side believes will go the distance. Consultations are free and available 24 hours a day, because a crash does not keep business hours.