Demand letters in Louisiana: what is different

Louisiana’s personal injury demand letters follow the national eight-section template, but several Louisiana-specific rules dramatically affect drafting strategy: the 1-year statute of limitations (La. Civ. Code Art. 3492), the pure comparative comparative negligence rule, and Louisiana’s at-fault auto-insurance system. Each of these forces a different framing in the demand letter.

This guide walks you through the Louisiana-specific drafting decisions, the deadlines that matter, and the formal-notice rules for claims against state and municipal defendants.

The 1-year deadline and what tolls it

Louisiana gives most personal injury claimants 1 years from the date of the injury to file suit. La. Civ. Code Art. 3492 is the controlling statute. The clock can be tolled for minors, persons under a legal disability, and (in narrow circumstances) for injuries that could not reasonably have been discovered earlier. A demand letter does not stop the clock; if the insurer is dragging its feet, the demand should be sent at least six months before the deadline so that suit can be filed if necessary.

Comparative negligence and how it shapes the demand

Louisiana follows the pure comparative rule on shared fault. Under this rule, every percentage of fault attributed to the claimant reduces the recovery proportionally. Demand letters in Louisiana should preempt the comparative-negligence argument by walking through the evidence — police report, witness statements, surveillance — that puts fault on the defendant.

Auto cases: at-fault state mechanics

Louisiana is an at-fault auto-insurance state. The at-fault driver’s liability insurer is responsible for your medical bills, lost income, and pain and suffering up to the policy limits. Louisiana demand letters should explicitly request the policy limits when injuries warrant it and should identify any UM/UIM coverage as a fallback.

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Government-defendant notice deadlines

If a Louisiana state agency, county, city, public hospital, or transit authority is a defendant, a separate notice-of-claim must be filed long before suit. The notice deadlines in Louisiana (typically between 60 and 180 days) are jurisdictional — miss the notice and the case is dead even if the SOL has not yet run. Always identify potential government defendants early and serve notice immediately.

Damages caps and Louisiana jury values

Louisiana permits recovery for both economic damages (medical bills, lost income, future care, lost earning capacity, property damage) and non-economic damages (pain and suffering, mental anguish, loss of enjoyment, loss of consortium). Some categories of cases — most notably medical malpractice — are subject to statutory caps; the demand letter should be drafted to maximize recovery within those caps. Punitive damages are available only on a clear-and-convincing showing of recklessness or intent.

Bad-faith leverage in Louisiana

Louisiana has adopted the substance of the NAIC Unfair Claims Settlement Practices Act, which requires insurers to acknowledge claims promptly, conduct a reasonable investigation, and respond to demands within a defined window (typically 30 days for first-party claims, 60 days for third-party). A demand letter that puts the insurer on formal notice of these duties — and that demands the policy limits when justified — preserves a separate bad-faith claim if the insurer unreasonably refuses to settle.

Your next step

Louisiana personal injury attorneys work on contingency: 33% of the recovery if the case settles, 40% if suit is filed. The free consultation costs you nothing and gives you a Louisiana-specific demand-value range.

Frequently asked questions

How long do I have to send a demand letter in Louisiana?

There is no separate deadline for the demand letter, but the underlying claim must be filed within 1 years (La. Civ. Code Art. 3492). Sending the demand 6+ months before the SOL preserves your ability to file suit if negotiations fail.

Does Louisiana have damage caps?

Some categories of Louisiana cases — especially medical malpractice and claims against government entities — are subject to caps. Most ordinary negligence cases are not capped on compensatory damages.