How to File a Slip and Fall Claim in California in 2026

Falls send over 8 million people to emergency rooms every year in the United States. Not just elderly people losing their balance. Working adults slipping on unmarked wet floors in grocery stores, tripping over broken pavement outside restaurants, or falling down poorly lit stairwells in apartment buildings. A hip fracture alone can run $35,000 or more in first-year medical costs, and over 60% of people hospitalized for fall injuries end up in skilled nursing facilities instead of going home.
If you fell on someone else’s property because of a hazard they should have fixed, California law gives you the right to file a claim. But the process has traps that can quietly destroy your case if you don’t know they exist. Surveillance footage gets deleted. Evidence of how long a spill sat on the floor disappears. Insurance adjusters start building their defense before you’ve even finished your first doctor visit.
Here’s how to protect yourself.
Key Takeaways
Key Takeaways
Priority
California property owners have a legal duty of ordinary care to keep their premises safe under Civil Code § 1714. If they knew about a hazard (or should have known) and did nothing, they’re liable.
Most businesses keep surveillance footage for only 7 to 30 days before it’s automatically overwritten. Getting a preservation letter sent quickly is one of the most important early steps in a slip and fall case.
→ Delay = destroyed evidence. Act immediately.
You have two years to file a lawsuit against private property owners. But if you fell on government property — a sidewalk, public building, or transit station — you must file an administrative claim within six months.
→ Government property deadline: 6 months, not 2 years
California follows pure comparative negligence. Even if you were partially at fault for your fall, you can still recover damages — just reduced by your share of the blame.
What Makes a Valid Slip and Fall Claim in California?
Not every fall on someone else’s property is a legal case. You need to prove four things under California’s premises liability jury instructions:
- The defendant owned, leased, or controlled the property
- They were negligent in maintaining it
- You were harmed
- And their negligence was a substantial factor in causing your injuries.
The word that matters most in that list is negligence. A store isn’t automatically liable because you fell. You have to show they either knew about the dangerous condition and failed to address it, or that the hazard existed long enough that any reasonable business would have found it during routine inspections.
This is called the “notice” requirement, and it’s where most slip and fall claims are actually won or lost.
How Does “Notice” Decide Your Slip and Fall Case?
Say you slip on a puddle of milk in a grocery store aisle. The store’s defense will almost certainly be: we didn’t know about it. The question then becomes whether they should have known.
California courts look at two types of notice. Actual notice means someone at the business saw the hazard, received a complaint, or created the condition themselves. An employee mopped without a wet floor sign. A manager who received a report about a broken handrail and never fixed it. That’s actual notice.
Constructive notice is trickier and more common. It means the hazard was there long enough that a reasonably careful property owner would have discovered it through normal inspections. The California Supreme Court addressed this directly in Ortega v. Kmart, holding that there are no exact time limitations for how long a hazard must exist. It’s a factual question. But the evidence matters enormously.
Dirty footprints tracked through a spill suggest it’s been there a while. Dried edges on a puddle. Cart wheel marks through liquid on the floor. A sticky residue versus a fresh wet spot. These physical details tell a story about time, and time is what establishes constructive notice.
On the flip side, a 2024 California appellate decision (Gonzalez v. Interstate Cleaning Corp.) found that a shopping center wasn’t liable when its janitorial crew had inspected the area just 8 to 9 minutes before the fall. The hazard was too fresh for constructive notice to apply.
What this means practically: the store’s inspection records become critical evidence. A grocery store that can document inspections every 30 minutes is in a much stronger position than one that can’t produce any cleaning logs at all.
What Should You Do Immediately After a Slip and Fall?
The first 48 hours after a fall matter more than most people realize. Not because of legal deadlines, but because evidence is actively disappearing.
- Report the incident to the property owner or manager. Ask them to fill out an incident report. Get the report number and the manager’s name. Here’s something most people don’t know: the store keeps the original report, and you don’t automatically get a copy. Take your own notes while the details are fresh. And be careful what you say during this conversation. Some managers are trained to ask questions that shift blame. “Were you on your phone?” or “Did you see the sign?” Stick to the facts of what happened. Don’t speculate about what caused the fall.
- Get medical attention, even if you feel okay. Adrenaline masks pain. Some fall injuries, particularly soft tissue damage, concussions, and spinal compression, don’t present symptoms for days. If you skip the doctor and symptoms show up a week later, insurance will argue the injury isn’t connected to the fall. A medical record from the day of the accident closes that argument.
- Document the scene aggressively. Photos and video of the exact spot where you fell. The hazard itself (spill, broken surface, debris, poor lighting). Wide shots showing the surrounding area and any lack of warning signs. Your shoes and clothing. Injuries as they appear. Get contact information from anyone who witnessed the fall before they leave.
Why Does Surveillance Footage Disappear So Fast?
This is one of the biggest hidden risks in slip and fall cases. Most retail stores keep security camera footage for 7 to 14 days. Chain restaurants might hold it for 30 days. After that, they can automatically overwrite it. The objective video record of your fall, the evidence that could show exactly what the hazard looked like, how long it was there, and whether any employees walked past it, just stops existing.
By the time many people finish their initial medical treatment, the footage is already gone.
One of the first things a personal injury attorney does in a slip and fall case is send a spoliation letter (also called a preservation letter) to the business. This is a formal legal notice requiring them to retain all surveillance footage, incident reports, maintenance logs, and cleaning schedules related to the accident. If the business deletes evidence after receiving this letter, courts can impose sanctions, including instructing the jury to assume the destroyed footage would have supported your claim.
This is a concrete, non-abstract reason to talk to an attorney quickly, even if you’re not sure whether you want to file a claim yet.
What Happens If You Fell on Government Property?
Different rules now. If your fall happened on a public sidewalk, in a government building, at a transit station, on school grounds, or in a public park, you can’t just file a lawsuit. California’s Tort Claims Act requires you to submit an administrative claim to the responsible government entity within six months of the accident. Miss this window, and your case is almost certainly dead, no matter how strong the evidence.
The substantive standard is different, too. Under Government Code § 835, you must prove the property had a “dangerous condition,” that the condition caused your injury, and that either a government employee’s negligence created the hazard or the entity had notice of it.
Government entities also have a unique defense: they can argue that even if the condition was dangerous, their response (or failure to respond) was “reasonable” given their resources and the time they had to act. Private property owners don’t get this defense.
Should You Handle the Claim Yourself or Hire a Lawyer?
Depends on the situation. For a minor injury where fault is obvious, medical bills are low, and the property owner’s insurance is cooperating, you might be able to negotiate a reasonable settlement on your own. You’d send a demand letter to the insurer detailing the incident, your medical costs, lost wages, and a dollar amount for pain and suffering. Then negotiate from there.
The reality check: insurance adjusters negotiate claims for a living. They know that unrepresented claimants are statistically more likely to accept early lowball offers. They also know that without an attorney, the implicit threat of a lawsuit carries less weight because the claimant would need to find, hire, and pay a lawyer to actually file one.
When should you seriously consider hiring an attorney? When the property owner disputes what happened. When your injuries require ongoing treatment. When you fall on government property and face the six-month claim deadline. When the insurer is delaying, denying, or offering a fraction of your medical bills. When the liability question is complicated, like shared fault or a missing surveillance video.
An attorney handles the evidence preservation, insurance negotiations, and, if necessary, litigation. Most personal injury attorneys work on contingency, meaning no fees unless you recover.
Common Mistakes That Destroy Slip and Fall Claims
- Giving a recorded statement to the insurance adjuster without legal advice. They’ll call quickly, sound friendly, and ask questions designed to get you to minimize your injuries or admit partial fault. You’re not obligated to give a recorded statement. Politely decline until you’ve spoken with a lawyer.
- Waiting too long to act. Not because of the statute of limitations (though that matters too), but because surveillance footage gets deleted, witnesses forget details, and the physical evidence of the hazard gets cleaned up.
- Posting about the incident on social media. A post saying “took a hard fall at the store today, but I’m tough, I’ll be fine” directly undermines a later injury claim. Adjusters check social media.
- Accepting a quick settlement before understanding the full extent of your injuries. Some injuries from falls, particularly back and neck problems, worsen over weeks or months. Once you accept a settlement and sign a release, you can’t go back for more.
FAQ: California Slip and Fall Claims
How long do I have to file a slip and fall claim in California? Two years for private property under CCP § 335.1. Six months for government property claims. But the practical deadline is much shorter because of the disappearing evidence.
What if I was partially at fault for my fall? California’s pure comparative negligence rule means you can still recover. If you were 30% at fault, your compensation is reduced by 30%. You’re not barred from filing.
How do I prove the property owner was negligent? Evidence that the hazard existed and the owner knew or should have known about it. Inspection logs, surveillance footage, witness statements, photos of the condition, and incident reports all build this case.
Do I need a lawyer for a slip and fall claim? Not always. But if injuries are significant, liability is disputed, footage has been deleted, or you fell on government property, legal representation substantially changes the outcome.
If your fall caused serious injuries and the insurance process isn’t going smoothly, DK Law handles slip and fall claims across 13+ California locations. Free consultations, no fees unless we recover for you. We’ll tell you honestly whether your case needs a lawyer or whether you can handle it yourself.
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