Missouri's Cap on Malpractice Damages: What It Means for Your Case

By Hendrickson Law | Medical Malpractice Attorneys for Missouri Patients

If you've been seriously injured by a doctor or hospital, one of the first things you may hear is that Missouri "caps" what you can recover in a malpractice case. That's true — but it's also widely misunderstood, and it shouldn't stop you from pursuing justice.

Here's what the cap actually means, what it doesn't limit, and why many malpractice cases in Missouri are still worth fighting for.


What Missouri Law Says

Missouri law limits non-economic damages in medical malpractice cases to approximately $450,000. This cap is adjusted annually based on the cost of living, so the exact figure changes slightly each year.

Non-economic damages include things like:

  • Pain and suffering
  • Emotional distress
  • Loss of enjoyment of life
  • Loss of consortium (the impact on your relationship with a spouse or family)

These are real, devastating harms — and the cap means that no matter how much a jury of your peers believes you deserve, the court is required by law to cut the award down. A jury can hear your story, see the evidence, and unanimously agree you deserve more — and it doesn't matter. The cap overrides them.


What the Cap Does NOT Limit

Here is what many people don't realize: the cap only applies to non-economic damages. There is no cap on economic damages in Missouri.

Economic damages include:

  • All past and future medical expenses — surgeries, hospitalizations, therapy, medications, assistive devices, in-home care
  • Lost income — wages, salary, and benefits you've already lost
  • Future lost earning capacity — what you would have earned had you not been injured
  • Costs of ongoing care — for injuries that require lifetime treatment or assistance

In a serious malpractice case — a catastrophic surgical injury, a delayed cancer diagnosis, a birth injury — these economic damages can easily reach into the hundreds of thousands or even millions of dollars. The $450,000 cap does not touch any of it.


A Common Misconception

Many injured patients hear "damage cap" and assume the most they can ever receive is $450,000. That is not correct.

Think of it this way: if a jury awards $800,000 in non-economic damages and $1.2 million in economic damages, the court would reduce the non-economic portion to the cap — but the full $1.2 million in economic damages would remain intact. The total recovery in that scenario would be approximately $1.65 million, not $450,000.

The cap is a ceiling on one category of damages. It is not a ceiling on your entire case.


When Someone Dies: Wrongful Death Caps

When medical negligence causes a patient's death, a separate wrongful death claim may be available to the surviving family. Missouri's wrongful death law allows family members to recover for their own losses — the grief, the loss of companionship, the loss of the person who was the center of their lives.

But here too, Missouri imposes a cap on non-economic damages in wrongful death cases involving medical malpractice. Families who lose a loved one to preventable negligence are similarly limited in what a court will allow them to recover for that loss — regardless of what a jury decides they deserve.

This is, frankly, one of the most unjust aspects of Missouri's malpractice laws. A family that loses a parent, a spouse, or a child because of a doctor's negligence deserves full accountability. The law, as it stands, prevents that.


Where the Cap Hits Hardest

The damage cap is not equally burdensome across all cases. In cases involving large economic losses — lengthy hospitalizations, future surgeries, lost decades of income — the uncapped economic damages often dwarf the non-economic cap, and victims can still achieve meaningful recovery.

But for certain victims, the cap is genuinely devastating:

  • People who suffer lifelong, permanent injuries — chronic pain, paralysis, permanent disability — where no amount of money truly compensates for a lifetime of suffering, and the law arbitrarily limits what they can receive
  • Retired individuals and those not in the workforce — who may have limited economic damages and are therefore disproportionately harmed by the cap on pain and suffering
  • Families in wrongful death cases — whose loss is immeasurable, but whose legal recovery is not

The cap was championed by hospital lobbyists and insurance companies as a way to limit their exposure. It was not designed with patients in mind. And it shows.


What to Do If You've Been Harmed

If you or a loved one has suffered serious harm due to medical negligence, don't let uncertainty about damage caps discourage you from seeking answers.

  1. Contact a malpractice attorney as early as possible — evidence is preserved and options remain open
  2. Gather your medical records — they are the foundation of any case evaluation
  3. Document your losses — keep track of bills, missed work, and the ongoing impact on your daily life

At Hendrickson Law, we evaluate every case with a full accounting of what you've lost — economically and personally. We'll give you a straight answer about what the law allows and what we believe your case can achieve.


📞 Have Questions About What Your Case Might Be Worth?

Call Hendrickson Law today at (314) 721-8833 or visit www.hendricksonlaw.com for a free consultation.

Missouri's damage cap is a legal obstacle — but it is not the end of the road. We know how to build cases that maximize every dollar of recovery our clients are entitled to, and we will fight for every bit of it.