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What Is the Average Wrongful Death Settlement in Pennsylvania?

What Is the Average Wrongful Death Settlement in Pennsylvania?

Families who lose a loved one in a preventable accident face immediate financial pressure from funeral costs, lost household income, medical bills from final treatment, and insurance companies pushing for quick closures. One of the first questions surviving spouses, children, and parents ask is: “What is a wrongful death case worth?” The search for an “average” settlement amount is understandable, but Pennsylvania wrongful death cases vary so widely in value that no single number provides meaningful guidance.

Pennsylvania law divides wrongful death claims into two separate actions: the Wrongful Death Act claim, which compensates surviving family members for their losses, and the Survival Action, which recovers damages the decedent experienced before death. Settlement amounts depend on the decedent’s age, earning capacity, family structure, the strength of liability evidence, available insurance coverage, and whether the claim settles before trial or proceeds to a verdict. 

Key Takeaways About Pennsylvania Wrongful Death Settlements

  • No “average” settlement exists because cases vary by the decedent’s age, income, dependents, liability clarity, and available insurance coverage
  • Pennsylvania separates wrongful death claims (family losses like support and companionship) from survival actions (the decedent’s medical bills and pre-death pain)
  • Insurance policy limits could cap recovery regardless of actual damages
  • Economic damages include lost financial support, household services, and funeral costs; non-economic damages include loss of companionship, guidance, and the relationship itself
  • Evidence to support a claim includes employment records, life-expectancy tables, family testimony, and clear proof of the defendant’s negligence 

Pennsylvania’s Wrongful Death Act: Who Can File and What It Covers

Close-up of a red rose placed on a gravestone, symbolizing love and loss. The withered rose highlights tragedy and sorrow in memory of a loved one.Pennsylvania’s Wrongful Death Act (42 Pa. C.S. § 8301) creates a statutory cause of action when a person dies due to another’s wrongful act, neglect, or default. The claim belongs to the decedent’s estate and must be filed by the personal representative named in the estate proceedings.

Who Can Recover Under Pennsylvania’s Wrongful Death Act

Only certain family members may recover damages under the Act, and Pennsylvania law establishes a strict hierarchy of beneficiaries. Surviving spouses, children, and parents recover damages for their own losses caused by the death. If the decedent left a spouse or children, parents cannot recover. If no spouse, children, or parents survive, siblings or other heirs under Pennsylvania intestacy law may recover, though these more distant relatives face practical challenges proving financial dependency or close relationships.

The personal representative files the claim on behalf of all beneficiaries, consolidating their interests into a single action. Individual family members cannot file separate wrongful death lawsuits; Pennsylvania law requires one unified claim managed by the estate representative.

Damages Available Under the Wrongful Death Act

The Wrongful Death Act compensates family members for their losses, not the decedent’s suffering. Recoverable damages include:

  • Loss of financial support: The present value of income the decedent would have contributed to the household over their remaining work-life expectancy. Calculations account for the decedent’s age, occupation, earnings history, raises, promotions, and benefits, minus personal consumption expenses.
  • Loss of household services: The economic value of unpaid work the decedent performed, such as childcare, home maintenance, meal preparation, transportation, financial management, and other contributions that surviving family members must now replace through paid services or additional labor.
  • Loss of companionship, guidance, and the family relationship: Non-economic damages for the emotional harm, loss of advice, mentorship, affection, and the intangible benefits of the relationship. Pennsylvania does not cap non-economic damages in wrongful death cases.
  • Funeral and burial expenses: Reasonable costs for services, caskets, burial plots, headstones, and related expenses. These damages belong to the estate and reimburse whoever paid the bills.

The Wrongful Death Act does not allow recovery for the decedent’s own pain, suffering, or medical expenses before death. Those damages fall under the separate Survival Action.

Pennsylvania’s Survival Action: The Decedent’s Own Claim

The Survival Action (42 Pa. C.S. § 8302) preserves the decedent’s personal-injury claim, allowing the estate to recover damages the decedent could have pursued if they had survived. This claim compensates the estate, and ultimately the heirs under the will or intestacy law, for harm the decedent experienced before death.

Damages Available Under the Survival Action

Damages that the deceased suffered from the accident that can be recovered include: 

  • Medical expenses: Hospital bills, ambulance transport, emergency surgery, ICU care, and all treatment costs between the injury and death.
  • Pain and suffering: Physical pain, emotional distress, fear, and anguish the decedent experienced while conscious after the injury. Pennsylvania recognizes pain-and-suffering damages even if the decedent survived only minutes or hours, provided they were conscious and aware of their condition.
  • Lost earnings: Wages the decedent would have earned between the injury date and death if they had been able to work.

The Survival Action does not cover losses that occurred after death; those belong to the Wrongful Death Act. The estate recovers survival damages, which then pass to heirs through probate according to the decedent’s will or Pennsylvania intestacy law if no will exists.

Filing Both Wrongful Death and Survival Claims

Pennsylvania allows personal representatives to file wrongful death and survival claims in the same lawsuit, consolidating all damages into one proceeding. This combined approach produces more comprehensive recovery than pursuing either claim alone because each action covers different categories of harm.

Defendants and insurers sometimes dispute which damages belong to which claim, particularly when medical expenses and funeral costs overlap or when calculating the appropriate allocation of settlement funds between estate beneficiaries and wrongful death beneficiaries. Without careful documentation and legal analysis, families risk accepting settlements that undervalue one claim while focusing on the other.

Courts routinely adjudicate both actions together to avoid duplicative litigation, conflicting verdicts, and inconsistent damage awards. Consolidation also benefits families by reducing legal costs, streamlining discovery, and presenting a unified narrative to the jury about how the defendant’s negligence caused both the decedent’s suffering and the family’s ongoing losses.

How Marcus & Mack Handles Dual Claims

Marcus & Mack structures wrongful death cases to pursue both claims simultaneously from the outset. We gather medical records documenting the decedent’s treatment, pain levels, consciousness, and final days to build the survival claim. We obtain employment records, tax returns, household budgets, and family testimony to quantify wrongful death damages. We coordinate with the estate’s personal representative to maintain proper standing for both actions and work with vocational economists, life-care planners, and medical experts who calculate the present value of lost earnings, household services, and future support.

Factors That Impact Wrongful Death Settlement Value

Settlement value turns on the decedent’s economic and non-economic contributions to the family, the strength of liability evidence, the defendant’s insurance coverage, and the jurisdiction’s jury verdict history. Key factors include:

  • Earning capacity and work-life expectancy: Age of the deceased, salary, and career impact the settlement value. Vocational economists can calculate present value by projecting future earnings, accounting for raises and promotions, then discounting to current dollars using actuarial tables and economic assumptions.
  • Dependent family members: Children who lose a parent face decades without financial support, guidance, and companionship. Spouses who depended on the decedent’s income or household services suffer immediate economic harm. The number and ages of dependents affect both economic and non-economic damage calculations.
  • Liability clarity: Cases where the defendant’s negligence is undisputed create different settlement dynamics than cases with disputed liability. Comparative negligence on the decedent’s part affects settlement negotiations and potential recovery amounts.
  • Pre-death pain and suffering: Survival Action damages vary based on whether the decedent remained conscious and aware for hours or days after the injury, experiencing pain, fear, and distress before death. Medical records, witness testimony, and 911 recordings document the decedent’s condition during this period.
  • Venue: Pennsylvania counties show different verdict patterns based on jury pools, median incomes, and local case history. Defendants consider venue when evaluating settlement positions.

How Insurance Policy Limits Impact Wrongful Death Settlements

Wrongful death lawyer at desk with scales of justice and hammer, symbolizing legal work for justice.Available insurance coverage plays a significant role in wrongful death settlement negotiations. Wrongful death claims may draw on multiple insurance policies depending on the circumstances of the death. Wrongful death damages may be paid from policies like the:

  • At-fault party’s auto liability policy: Primary coverage for motor-vehicle deaths, Pennsylvania law requires auto insurance policies to carry minimum bodily-injury liability limits of $15,000 per person and $30,000 per accident.
  • At-fault party’s homeowners or umbrella policy: Additional liability coverage that may apply depending on how and where the death occurred. 
  • Employer policies: When the at-fault party was acting within the scope of employment at the time of the incident, the employer’s commercial general liability or commercial auto policy may provide coverage. 
  • Uninsured-motorist (UM) and underinsured-motorist (UIM) coverage: Pennsylvania law requires insurers to offer UM/UIM limits equal to the policyholder’s liability limits unless rejected in writing.
  • Workers’ compensation death benefits: When the decedent died in a work-related incident, workers’ compensation provides death benefits to dependents, though these amounts typically fall below wrongful death damages and may affect other recoveries through coordination-of-benefits rules.

When all available insurance coverage is exhausted and damages exceed policy limits, families face the question of pursuing the defendant’s personal assets. Pennsylvania law allows judgment creditors to execute against personal assets to satisfy wrongful death judgments, but practical recovery remains limited in most cases. For these reasons, identifying and pursuing available insurance coverage represents the most reliable path to recovery in wrongful death cases.

What Evidence Strengthens Wrongful Death Settlement Value

Documentation that proves the decedent’s economic contributions, family relationships, and the defendant’s liability increases settlement leverage and counters insurer arguments for reduced payouts. Key evidence includes:

  • Employment and earnings records: Tax returns, W-2s, pay stubs, employment contracts, and personnel files document income, benefits, and career trajectory. Self-employed decedents require profit-and-loss statements, client contracts, and business records. 
  • Life-expectancy and work-life tables: Actuarial tables published by the Social Security Administration and Bureau of Labor Statistics establish average life expectancy and work-life expectancy by age, gender, and occupation. 
  • Family testimony: Surviving spouses, children, and parents testify about the decedent’s role in the family, including daily routines, childcare responsibilities, home maintenance, financial decisions, emotional support, and guidance. 
  • Medical records and autopsy reports: Records documenting the decedent’s injuries, treatment, consciousness level, and cause of death establish survival damages and support causation. Autopsy reports confirm the mechanism of death and rule out pre-existing conditions or intervening causes.
  • Liability evidence: Police reports, witness statements, accident-reconstruction analysis, product-defect investigations, medical-malpractice expert opinions, and regulatory violations establish the defendant’s negligence.
  • Photographs and personal records: Images of the decedent with family members, children’s drawings, school records, social-media posts, and letters document the relationship and demonstrate the emotional bond.

Gathering and organizing this evidence early in the case strengthens negotiating position and prevents insurers from minimizing the decedent’s contributions or questioning causation. 

Marcus & Mack works with families to collect comprehensive documentation, consult appropriate experts, and present evidence in demand letters and settlement negotiations that reflect the scope of the family’s loss under Pennsylvania law.

FAQ About Pennsylvania Wrongful Death Settlements

What Is the Statute of Limitations for Wrongful Death in Pennsylvania?

Pennsylvania imposes a two-year statute of limitations measured from the date of death (42 Pa. C.S. § 5524). If the decedent survived weeks or months after the injury before dying, the two-year deadline runs from the death date, not the injury date.

What If My Loved One Died After the Accident Date?

The wrongful death claim does not arise until death occurs. If the decedent survived for days, weeks, or months after the injury, the survival action covers the period from injury to death, while the wrongful death claim covers losses after death. The two-year statute of limitations for wrongful death begins at death, but the survival action’s two-year period begins at the injury date.

How Are Wrongful Death Settlement Proceeds Taxed in Pennsylvania?

Wrongful death damages for loss of support, loss of companionship, and funeral expenses are generally not taxable under federal or Pennsylvania law, nor are Survival Action damages for pain and suffering. Portions compensating for lost interest or punitive damages may be taxable. Consult a tax professional about your specific settlement.

Can a Wrongful Death Settlement Be Reduced If My Loved One Was Partially at Fault?

Yes. Pennsylvania’s modified comparative-negligence rule reduces wrongful death settlements by the decedent’s percentage of fault, provided their fault stays below 51%. If the decedent was 51% or more at fault, no recovery is available.

Do Wrongful Death Settlements Go Through Probate?

Wrongful death damages paid directly to beneficiaries do not pass through probate, but survival action damages belong to the estate and are distributed to heirs through probate. Funeral expenses reimbursed under the wrongful death claim also pass through the estate.

How Much Does a Wrongful Death Lawyer Cost in Pennsylvania?

Marcus & Mack wrongful death attorneys work on contingency, meaning no upfront fees and no payment unless your family recovers compensation. We offer free consultations at all five locations.

Seek Guidance During a Difficult Time

Robert S. Marcus, Attorney at Marcus & Mack

Robert S. Marcus Personal Injury Attorney in Pennsylvania

Losing a loved one to someone else’s negligence causes financial and legal uncertainties at the worst possible moment. You shouldn’t have to navigate Pennsylvania’s wrongful death statutes, negotiate with insurance adjusters, or calculate damages while mourning your loss. 

Marcus & Mack represents families pursuing wrongful death and survival claims throughout Central and Western Pennsylvania. Our five offices in Indiana (PA), State College, DuBois, Altoona, and Johnstown serve families who need local access backed by experienced wrongful death advocacy.

  • Indiana, PA: Lost a loved one in a preventable accident near Indiana? Call (724) 349-5602 for a free consultation.
  • State College: Facing a wrongful death claim in State College? Reach our team at (814) 238-3480.
  • DuBois: Need guidance on wrongful death damages in DuBois? Call (724) 717-2137.
  • Altoona: Questions about wrongful death settlements in Altoona? Contact us at (814) 942-9443.
  • Johnstown: Wrongful death case in Johnstown? Call (814) 539-3213 for a free case review.

Bring any documentation you have to your free consultation, and let our team evaluate your claim with the care and attention your family deserves.

 

Come And Visit Our Offices

Marcus & Mack

Marcus & Mack
N/a
57 S 6th Street,
The Mitchell House

Indiana PA   15701
1216 11th Ave
Suite 219

Altoona PA   16601
108 West Beaver Avenue,
Suite 203

State College PA  16801
334 Budfield St,
#132

Johnstown PA  15904
12 West Long Ave.
Suite 203

DuBois PA  15801